
About
Review a diff for clarity and safe simplifications, then optionally apply low-risk fixes.
name: simplify-code description: "Review a diff for clarity and safe simplifications, then optionally apply low-risk fixes." risk: safe source: "Dimillian/Skills (MIT)" date_added: "2026-03-25"
Simplify Code
Review changed code for reuse, quality, efficiency, and clarity issues. Use Codex sub-agents to review in parallel, then optionally apply only high-confidence, behavior-preserving fixes.
When to Use
- When the user asks to simplify, clean up, refactor, or review changed code.
- When you want high-confidence, behavior-preserving improvements on a scoped diff.
Modes
Choose the mode from the user's request:
review-only: user asks to review, audit, or check the changessafe-fixes: user asks to simplify, clean up, or refactor the changesfix-and-validate: same assafe-fixes, but also run the smallest relevant validation after edits
If the user does not specify, default to:
review-onlyfor "review", "audit", or "check"safe-fixesfor "simplify", "clean up", or "refactor"
Step 1: Determine the Scope and Diff Command
Prefer this scope order:
- Files or paths explicitly named by the user
- Current git changes
- Files edited earlier in the current Codex turn
- Most recently modified tracked files, only if the user asked for a review but there is no diff
If there is no clear scope, stop and say so briefly.
When using git changes, determine the smallest correct diff command based on the repo state:
- unstaged work:
git diff - staged work:
git diff --cached - branch or commit comparison explicitly requested by the user: use that exact diff target
- mixed staged and unstaged work: review both
Do not assume git diff HEAD is the right default when a smaller diff is available.
Before reviewing standards or applying fixes, read the repo's local instruction files and relevant project docs for the touched area. Prefer the closest applicable guidance, such as:
AGENTS.md- repo workflow docs
- architecture or style docs for the touched module
Use those instructions to distinguish real issues from intentional local patterns.
Step 2: Launch Four Review Sub-Agents in Parallel
Use Codex sub-agents when the scope is large enough for parallel review to help. For a tiny diff or one very small file, it is acceptable to review locally instead.
When spawning sub-agents:
- give each sub-agent the same scope
- tell each sub-agent to inspect only its assigned review role
- ask for concise, structured findings only
- ask each sub-agent to report file, line or symbol, problem, recommended fix, and confidence
Use four review roles.
Sub-Agent 1: Code Reuse Review
Review the changes for reuse opportunities:
- Search for existing helpers, utilities, or shared abstractions that already solve the same problem.
- Flag duplicated functions or near-duplicate logic introduced in the change.
- Flag inline logic that should call an existing helper instead of re-implementing it.
Recommended sub-agent role: explorer for broad codebase lookup, or reviewer if a stronger review pass is more useful than wide search.
Sub-Agent 2: Code Quality Review
Review the same changes for code quality issues:
- Redundant state, cached values, or derived values stored unnecessarily
- Parameter sprawl caused by threading new arguments through existing call chains
- Copy-paste with slight variation that should become a shared abstraction
- Leaky abstractions or ownership violations across module boundaries
- Stringly-typed values where existing typed contracts, enums, or constants already exist
Recommended sub-agent role: reviewer
Sub-Agent 3: Efficiency Review
Review the same changes for efficiency issues:
- Repeated work, duplicate reads, duplicate API calls, or unnecessary recomputation
- Sequential work that could safely run concurrently
- New work added to startup, render, request, or other hot paths without clear need
- Pre-checks for existence when the operation itself can be attempted directly and errors handled
- Memory growth, missing cleanup, or listener/subscription leaks
- Overly broad reads or scans when the code only needs a subset
Recommended sub-agent role: reviewer
Sub-Agent 4: Clarity and Standards Review
Review the same changes for clarity, local standards, and balance:
- Violations of local project conventions or module patterns
- Unnecessary complexity, deep nesting, weak names, or redundant comments
- Overly compact or clever code that reduces readability
- Over-simplification that collapses separate concerns into one unclear unit
- Dead code, dead abstractions, or indirection without value
Recommended sub-agent role: reviewer
Only report issues that materially improve maintainability, correctness, or cost. Do not churn code just to make it look different.
Step 3: Aggregate Findings
Wait for all review sub-agents to complete, then merge their findings.
Normalize findings into this shape:
- File and lin