code-simplification

Simplifies code for clarity. Use when refactoring code for clarity without changing behavior. Use when code works but is harder to read, maintain, or extend than it should be. Use when reviewing code that has accumulated unnecessary complexity.

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name:code-simplificationdescription:Simplifies code for clarity. Use when refactoring code for clarity without changing behavior. Use when code works but is harder to read, maintain, or extend than it should be. Use when reviewing code that has accumulated unnecessary complexity.

Code Simplification

> Inspired by the Claude Code Simplifier plugin. Adapted here as a model-agnostic, process-driven skill for any AI coding agent.

Overview

Simplify code by reducing complexity while preserving exact behavior. The goal is not fewer lines — it's code that is easier to read, understand, modify, and debug. Every simplification must pass a simple test: "Would a new team member understand this faster than the original?"

When to Use

  • After a feature is working and tests pass, but the implementation feels heavier than it needs to be

  • During code review when readability or complexity issues are flagged

  • When you encounter deeply nested logic, long functions, or unclear names

  • When refactoring code written under time pressure

  • When consolidating related logic scattered across files

  • After merging changes that introduced duplication or inconsistency
  • When NOT to use:

  • Code is already clean and readable — don't simplify for the sake of it

  • You don't understand what the code does yet — comprehend before you simplify

  • The code is performance-critical and the "simpler" version would be measurably slower

  • You're about to rewrite the module entirely — simplifying throwaway code wastes effort
  • The Five Principles

    1. Preserve Behavior Exactly

    Don't change what the code does — only how it expresses it. All inputs, outputs, side effects, error behavior, and edge cases must remain identical. If you're not sure a simplification preserves behavior, don't make it.

    ASK BEFORE EVERY CHANGE:
    → Does this produce the same output for every input?
    → Does this maintain the same error behavior?
    → Does this preserve the same side effects and ordering?
    → Do all existing tests still pass without modification?

    2. Follow Project Conventions

    Simplification means making code more consistent with the codebase, not imposing external preferences. Before simplifying:

    1. Read CLAUDE.md / project conventions
    2. Study how neighboring code handles similar patterns
    3. Match the project's style for:
       - Import ordering and module system
       - Function declaration style
       - Naming conventions
       - Error handling patterns
       - Type annotation depth

    Simplification that breaks project consistency is not simplification — it's churn.

    3. Prefer Clarity Over Cleverness

    Explicit code is better than compact code when the compact version requires a mental pause to parse.

    // UNCLEAR: Dense ternary chain
    const label = isNew ? 'New' : isUpdated ? 'Updated' : isArchived ? 'Archived' : 'Active';
    
    // CLEAR: Readable mapping
    function getStatusLabel(item: Item): string {
      if (item.isNew) return 'New';
      if (item.isUpdated) return 'Updated';
      if (item.isArchived) return 'Archived';
      return 'Active';
    }

    // UNCLEAR: Chained reduces with inline logic
    const result = items.reduce((acc, item) => ({
      ...acc,
      [item.id]: { ...acc[item.id], count: (acc[item.id]?.count ?? 0) + 1 }
    }), {});
    
    // CLEAR: Named intermediate step
    const countById = new Map<string, number>();
    for (const item of items) {
      countById.set(item.id, (countById.get(item.id) ?? 0) + 1);
    }

    4. Maintain Balance

    Simplification has a failure mode: over-simplification. Watch for these traps:

  • Inlining too aggressively — removing a helper that gave a concept a name makes the call site harder to read

  • Combining unrelated logic — two simple functions merged into one complex function is not simpler

  • Removing &quot;unnecessary&quot; abstraction — some abstractions exist for extensibility or testability, not complexity

  • Optimizing for line count — fewer lines is not the goal; easier comprehension is
  • 5. Scope to What Changed

    Default to simplifying recently modified code. Avoid drive-by refactors of unrelated code unless explicitly asked to broaden scope. Unscoped simplification creates noise in diffs and risks unintended regressions.

    The Simplification Process

    Step 1: Understand Before Touching (Chesterton's Fence)

    Before changing or removing anything, understand why it exists. This is Chesterton's Fence: if you see a fence across a road and don't understand why it's there, don't tear it down. First understand the reason, then decide if the reason still applies.

    BEFORE SIMPLIFYING, ANSWER:
    - What is this code's responsibility?
    - What calls it? What does it call?
    - What are the edge cases and error paths?
    - Are there tests that define the expected behavior?
    - Why might it have been written this way? (Performance? Platform constraint? Historical reason?)
    - Check git blame: what was the original context for this code?

    If you can't answer these, you're not ready to simplify. Read more context first.

    Step 2: Identify Simplification Opportunities

    Scan for these patterns — each one is a concrete signal, not a vague smell:

    Structural complexity:

    PatternSignalSimplification
    Deep nesting (3+ levels)Hard to follow control flowExtract conditions into guard clauses or helper functions
    Long functions (50+ lines)Multiple responsibilitiesSplit into focused functions with descriptive names
    Nested ternariesRequires mental stack to parseReplace with if/else chains, switch, or lookup objects
    Boolean parameter flagsdoThing(true, false, true)Replace with options objects or separate functions
    Repeated conditionalsSame if check in multiple placesExtract to a well-named predicate function

    Naming and readability:

    PatternSignalSimplification
    Generic namesdata, result, temp, val, itemRename to describe the content: userProfile, validationErrors
    Abbreviated namesusr, cfg, btn, evtUse full words unless the abbreviation is universal (id, url, api)
    Misleading namesFunction named get that also mutates stateRename to reflect actual behavior
    Comments explaining "what"// increment counter above count++Delete the comment — the code is clear enough
    Comments explaining "why"// Retry because the API is flaky under loadKeep these — they carry intent the code can't express

    Redundancy:

    PatternSignalSimplification
    Duplicated logicSame 5+ lines in multiple placesExtract to a shared function
    Dead codeUnreachable branches, unused variables, commented-out blocksRemove (after confirming it's truly dead)
    Unnecessary abstractionsWrapper that adds no valueInline the wrapper, call the underlying function directly
    Over-engineered patternsFactory-for-a-factory, strategy-with-one-strategyReplace with the simple direct approach
    Redundant type assertionsCasting to a type that's already inferredRemove the assertion

    Step 3: Apply Changes Incrementally

    Make one simplification at a time. Run tests after each change. Submit refactoring changes separately from feature or bug fix changes. A PR that refactors and adds a feature is two PRs — split them.

    FOR EACH SIMPLIFICATION:
    1. Make the change
    2. Run the test suite
    3. If tests pass → commit (or continue to next simplification)
    4. If tests fail → revert and reconsider

    Avoid batching multiple simplifications into a single untested change. If something breaks, you need to know which simplification caused it.

    The Rule of 500: If a refactoring would touch more than 500 lines, invest in automation (codemods, sed scripts, AST transforms) rather than making the changes by hand. Manual edits at that scale are error-prone and exhausting to review.

    Step 4: Verify the Result

    After all simplifications, step back and evaluate the whole:

    COMPARE BEFORE AND AFTER:
    - Is the simplified version genuinely easier to understand?
    - Did you introduce any new patterns inconsistent with the codebase?
    - Is the diff clean and reviewable?
    - Would a teammate approve this change?

    If the "simplified" version is harder to understand or review, revert. Not every simplification attempt succeeds.

    Language-Specific Guidance

    TypeScript / JavaScript

    // SIMPLIFY: Unnecessary async wrapper
    // Before
    async function getUser(id: string): Promise<User> {
      return await userService.findById(id);
    }
    // After
    function getUser(id: string): Promise<User> {
      return userService.findById(id);
    }
    
    // SIMPLIFY: Verbose conditional assignment
    // Before
    let displayName: string;
    if (user.nickname) {
      displayName = user.nickname;
    } else {
      displayName = user.fullName;
    }
    // After
    const displayName = user.nickname || user.fullName;
    
    // SIMPLIFY: Manual array building
    // Before
    const activeUsers: User[] = [];
    for (const user of users) {
      if (user.isActive) {
        activeUsers.push(user);
      }
    }
    // After
    const activeUsers = users.filter((user) => user.isActive);
    
    // SIMPLIFY: Redundant boolean return
    // Before
    function isValid(input: string): boolean {
      if (input.length > 0 && input.length < 100) {
        return true;
      }
      return false;
    }
    // After
    function isValid(input: string): boolean {
      return input.length > 0 && input.length < 100;
    }

    Python

    # SIMPLIFY: Verbose dictionary building
    # Before
    result = {}
    for item in items:
        result[item.id] = item.name
    # After
    result = {item.id: item.name for item in items}
    
    # SIMPLIFY: Nested conditionals with early return
    # Before
    def process(data):
        if data is not None:
            if data.is_valid():
                if data.has_permission():
                    return do_work(data)
                else:
                    raise PermissionError("No permission")
            else:
                raise ValueError("Invalid data")
        else:
            raise TypeError("Data is None")
    # After
    def process(data):
        if data is None:
            raise TypeError("Data is None")
        if not data.is_valid():
            raise ValueError("Invalid data")
        if not data.has_permission():
            raise PermissionError("No permission")
        return do_work(data)

    React / JSX

    // SIMPLIFY: Verbose conditional rendering
    // Before
    function UserBadge({ user }: Props) {
      if (user.isAdmin) {
        return <Badge variant="admin">Admin</Badge>;
      } else {
        return <Badge variant="default">User</Badge>;
      }
    }
    // After
    function UserBadge({ user }: Props) {
      const variant = user.isAdmin ? 'admin' : 'default';
      const label = user.isAdmin ? 'Admin' : 'User';
      return <Badge variant={variant}>{label}</Badge>;
    }
    
    // SIMPLIFY: Prop drilling through intermediate components
    // Before — consider whether context or composition solves this better.
    // This is a judgment call — flag it, don't auto-refactor.

    Common Rationalizations

    RationalizationReality
    "It's working, no need to touch it"Working code that's hard to read will be hard to fix when it breaks. Simplifying now saves time on every future change.
    "Fewer lines is always simpler"A 1-line nested ternary is not simpler than a 5-line if/else. Simplicity is about comprehension speed, not line count.
    "I'll just quickly simplify this unrelated code too"Unscoped simplification creates noisy diffs and risks regressions in code you didn't intend to change. Stay focused.
    "The types make it self-documenting"Types document structure, not intent. A well-named function explains why better than a type signature explains what.
    "This abstraction might be useful later"Don't preserve speculative abstractions. If it's not used now, it's complexity without value. Remove it and re-add when needed.
    "The original author must have had a reason"Maybe. Check git blame — apply Chesterton's Fence. But accumulated complexity often has no reason; it's just the residue of iteration under pressure.
    "I'll refactor while adding this feature"Separate refactoring from feature work. Mixed changes are harder to review, revert, and understand in history.

    Red Flags

  • Simplification that requires modifying tests to pass (you likely changed behavior)

  • "Simplified" code that is longer and harder to follow than the original

  • Renaming things to match your preferences rather than project conventions

  • Removing error handling because "it makes the code cleaner"

  • Simplifying code you don't fully understand

  • Batching many simplifications into one large, hard-to-review commit

  • Refactoring code outside the scope of the current task without being asked
  • Verification

    After completing a simplification pass:

  • [ ] All existing tests pass without modification

  • [ ] Build succeeds with no new warnings

  • [ ] Linter/formatter passes (no style regressions)

  • [ ] Each simplification is a reviewable, incremental change

  • [ ] The diff is clean — no unrelated changes mixed in

  • [ ] Simplified code follows project conventions (checked against CLAUDE.md or equivalent)

  • [ ] No error handling was removed or weakened

  • [ ] No dead code was left behind (unused imports, unreachable branches)

  • [ ] A teammate or review agent would approve the change as a net improvement