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Karpathy Coder — Active Coding Discipline

Engineering - POWERFUL karpathy-coder Source

Install: claude /plugin install engineering-advanced-skills

Derived from Andrej Karpathy's observations on LLM coding pitfalls. This is not just guidelines — it ships Python tools that detect violations, a review agent, a slash command, and a pre-commit hook.

"The models make wrong assumptions on your behalf and just run along with them without checking. They don't manage their confusion, don't seek clarifications, don't surface inconsistencies, don't present tradeoffs, don't push back when they should."

"They really like to overcomplicate code and APIs, bloat abstractions, don't clean up dead code... implement a bloated construction over 1000 lines when 100 would do."

"LLMs are exceptionally good at looping until they meet specific goals... Don't tell it what to do, give it success criteria and watch it go."

— Andrej Karpathy

The four principles

1. Think Before Coding

Don't assume. Don't hide confusion. Surface tradeoffs.

  • State assumptions explicitly. If uncertain, ask.
  • If multiple interpretations exist, present them — don't pick silently.
  • If a simpler approach exists, say so. Push back when warranted.
  • If something is unclear, stop. Name what's confusing. Ask.

2. Simplicity First

Minimum code that solves the problem. Nothing speculative.

  • No features beyond what was asked.
  • No abstractions for single-use code.
  • No "flexibility" or "configurability" that wasn't requested.
  • No error handling for impossible scenarios.
  • If you write 200 lines and it could be 50, rewrite it.

The test: Would a senior engineer say this is overcomplicated? If yes, simplify.

3. Surgical Changes

Touch only what you must. Clean up only your own mess.

  • Don't "improve" adjacent code, comments, or formatting.
  • Don't refactor things that aren't broken.
  • Match existing style, even if you'd do it differently.
  • If you notice unrelated dead code, mention it — don't delete it.
  • Remove imports/variables/functions that YOUR changes made unused.
  • Don't remove pre-existing dead code unless asked.

The test: Every changed line should trace directly to the user's request.

4. Goal-Driven Execution

Define success criteria. Loop until verified.

Instead of... Transform to...
"Add validation" "Write tests for invalid inputs, then make them pass"
"Fix the bug" "Write a test that reproduces it, then make it pass"
"Refactor X" "Ensure tests pass before and after"

For multi-step tasks, state a brief plan:

1. [Step] → verify: [check]
2. [Step] → verify: [check]
3. [Step] → verify: [check]

Slash command

/karpathy-check — Run the full 4-principle review on your staged changes.

Python tools (scripts/)

All tools are stdlib-only. Run with --help.

Script What it detects
complexity_checker.py Over-engineering: too many classes, deep nesting, high cyclomatic complexity, unused params, premature abstractions
diff_surgeon.py Diff noise: lines that don't trace to the stated goal — comment changes, style drift, drive-by refactors
assumption_linter.py Hidden assumptions in a plan: unasked features, missing clarifications, silent interpretation choices
goal_verifier.py Weak success criteria: vague plans without verifiable checks, missing test assertions

Sub-agent

karpathy-reviewer — Runs all 4 principles against a diff. Dispatched by /karpathy-check or manually before committing.

Pre-commit hook

hooks/karpathy-gate.sh — runs complexity_checker.py and diff_surgeon.py on staged files. Warns (non-blocking) when violations are found. Wire it via .claude/settings.json or Husky.

References

  • references/karpathy-principles.md — the source quotes, deeper context, when to relax each principle
  • references/anti-patterns.md — 10+ before/after examples across Python, TypeScript, and shell
  • references/enforcement-patterns.md — how to wire hooks, CI integration, team adoption

When to relax

These principles bias toward caution over speed. For trivial tasks (typo fixes, obvious one-liners), use judgment. The principles matter most on:

  • Non-trivial implementations (>20 lines changed)
  • Code you don't fully understand
  • Multi-step tasks with unclear requirements
  • Anything that will be reviewed by humans

Cross-tool compatibility

Installs via plugin for Claude Code. For other tools, copy the principles into your schema file:

Tool Schema file
Claude Code CLAUDE.md (auto-loaded by plugin)
Codex CLI AGENTS.md
Cursor AGENTS.md or .cursorrules
Antigravity / OpenCode / Gemini CLI AGENTS.md
  • self-eval — honest quality scoring after completing work
  • code-reviewer — broader code review; karpathy-coder focuses on the 4 LLM-specific pitfalls
  • llm-wiki — compound knowledge; karpathy-coder ensures you don't overcomplicate while building it