test1123123

v1.0.3

Captures learnings, errors, and corrections to enable continuous improvement. Use when: (1) A command or operation fails unexpectedly, (2) User corrects Clau...

0· 139·0 current·0 all-time

Install

OpenClaw Prompt Flow

Install with OpenClaw

Best for remote or guided setup. Copy the exact prompt, then paste it into OpenClaw for a6191187/test1-232qe11.

Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "test1123123" (a6191187/test1-232qe11) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/a6191187/test1-232qe11
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

Command Line

CLI Commands

Use the direct CLI path if you want to install manually and keep every step visible.

OpenClaw CLI

Bare skill slug

openclaw skills install test1-232qe11

ClawHub CLI

Package manager switcher

npx clawhub@latest install test1-232qe11
Security Scan
VirusTotalVirusTotal
Benign
View report →
OpenClawOpenClaw
Benign
high confidence
Purpose & Capability
The name/description (self-improvement / capture learnings and errors) matches the included artifacts: scripts to remind about learnings (activator.sh), detect command errors (error-detector.sh), and scaffold new skills from learnings (extract-skill.sh). All actions (creating .learnings/, writing markdown logs, scaffolding ./skills/<name>/) are coherent with the stated purpose.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md stays mostly within scope: it instructs creating .learnings/ logs, wiring optional hooks, and promoting high-value items to workspace files. It explicitly warns not to log secrets and to prefer redaction. One operational note: enabling the hook causes workspace files to be injected into sessions (intentional for OpenClaw) — that can influence model outputs (prompt injection risk) and should be enabled only in trusted environments. Also, error-detector.sh reads the CLAUDE_TOOL_OUTPUT environment variable (expected for the hook) — the doc warns treating that content as sensitive but scripts do not automatically redact outputs beyond pattern matching.
Install Mechanism
There is no packaged install step in the registry entry (instruction-only), and the SKILL.md suggests manual installation or cloning from a GitHub repo. The included scripts are local and do not download or execute remote archives. No high-risk download/extract behavior is present in the provided files.
Credentials
The skill does not declare required environment variables, credentials, or config paths. The only runtime env used in scripts is CLAUDE_TOOL_OUTPUT (used by error-detector.sh), which is reasonable for a PostToolUse hook. No unrelated secrets or cloud credentials are requested.
Persistence & Privilege
always:false (default) and agent-autonomous invocation is allowed (platform default). The skill recommends installing hooks and placing files under ~/.openclaw/workspace which will persist and be injected into sessions — this is part of its design but elevates the impact of any mistaken or malicious workspace content. Enable hooks only if you trust the source and review workspace files before promoting content into global workspace files.
Assessment
This skill is internally consistent with its purpose: it creates local .learnings/ logs, emits short hook reminders, detects simple error patterns from tool output, and scaffolds new skills from learnings. Before installing or enabling hooks: 1) Inspect the scripts (activator.sh, error-detector.sh, extract-skill.sh) yourself and ensure you’re comfortable with their behavior; they run locally and will write files. 2) Do not enable the PostToolUse hook unless you trust the environment, because it inspects CLAUDE_TOOL_OUTPUT (potentially sensitive). 3) Follow the skill's own advice: never log secrets, tokens, full private files, or raw transcripts unless you explicitly want them stored. 4) If you enable hooks, prefer project-level or matcher-restricted configuration (only trigger on error-related prompts) to reduce accidental injection of sensitive or noisy content into every session. 5) If unsure, keep the skill user-invocable only (don’t enable automatic hooks) and test in an isolated workspace first.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

latestvk976jckevs8kw3qmfte8yey4td83ytkx
139downloads
0stars
2versions
Updated 1w ago
v1.0.3
MIT-0

Self-Improvement Skill

Log learnings and errors to markdown files for continuous improvement. Coding agents can later process these into fixes, and important learnings get promoted to project memory.

First-Use Initialisation

Before logging anything, ensure the .learnings/ directory and files exist in the project or workspace root. If any are missing, create them:

mkdir -p .learnings
[ -f .learnings/LEARNINGS.md ] || printf "# Learnings\n\nCorrections, insights, and knowledge gaps captured during development.\n\n**Categories**: correction | insight | knowledge_gap | best_practice\n\n---\n" > .learnings/LEARNINGS.md
[ -f .learnings/ERRORS.md ] || printf "# Errors\n\nCommand failures and integration errors.\n\n---\n" > .learnings/ERRORS.md
[ -f .learnings/FEATURE_REQUESTS.md ] || printf "# Feature Requests\n\nCapabilities requested by the user.\n\n---\n" > .learnings/FEATURE_REQUESTS.md

Never overwrite existing files. This is a no-op if .learnings/ is already initialised.

Do not log secrets, tokens, private keys, environment variables, or full source/config files unless the user explicitly asks for that level of detail. Prefer short summaries or redacted excerpts over raw command output or full transcripts.

If you want automatic reminders or setup assistance, use the opt-in hook workflow described in Hook Integration.

Quick Reference

SituationAction
Command/operation failsLog to .learnings/ERRORS.md
User corrects youLog to .learnings/LEARNINGS.md with category correction
User wants missing featureLog to .learnings/FEATURE_REQUESTS.md
API/external tool failsLog to .learnings/ERRORS.md with integration details
Knowledge was outdatedLog to .learnings/LEARNINGS.md with category knowledge_gap
Found better approachLog to .learnings/LEARNINGS.md with category best_practice
Simplify/Harden recurring patternsLog/update .learnings/LEARNINGS.md with Source: simplify-and-harden and a stable Pattern-Key
Similar to existing entryLink with **See Also**, consider priority bump
Broadly applicable learningPromote to CLAUDE.md, AGENTS.md, and/or .github/copilot-instructions.md
Workflow improvementsPromote to AGENTS.md (OpenClaw workspace)
Tool gotchasPromote to TOOLS.md (OpenClaw workspace)
Behavioral patternsPromote to SOUL.md (OpenClaw workspace)

OpenClaw Setup (Recommended)

OpenClaw is the primary platform for this skill. It uses workspace-based prompt injection with automatic skill loading.

Installation

Via ClawdHub (recommended):

clawdhub install self-improving-agent

Manual:

git clone https://github.com/peterskoett/self-improving-agent.git ~/.openclaw/skills/self-improving-agent

Remade for openclaw from original repo : https://github.com/pskoett/pskoett-ai-skills - https://github.com/pskoett/pskoett-ai-skills/tree/main/skills/self-improvement

Workspace Structure

OpenClaw injects these files into every session:

~/.openclaw/workspace/
├── AGENTS.md          # Multi-agent workflows, delegation patterns
├── SOUL.md            # Behavioral guidelines, personality, principles
├── TOOLS.md           # Tool capabilities, integration gotchas
├── MEMORY.md          # Long-term memory (main session only)
├── memory/            # Daily memory files
│   └── YYYY-MM-DD.md
└── .learnings/        # This skill's log files
    ├── LEARNINGS.md
    ├── ERRORS.md
    └── FEATURE_REQUESTS.md

Create Learning Files

mkdir -p ~/.openclaw/workspace/.learnings

Then create the log files (or copy from assets/):

  • LEARNINGS.md — corrections, knowledge gaps, best practices
  • ERRORS.md — command failures, exceptions
  • FEATURE_REQUESTS.md — user-requested capabilities

Promotion Targets

When learnings prove broadly applicable, promote them to workspace files:

Learning TypePromote ToExample
Behavioral patternsSOUL.md"Be concise, avoid disclaimers"
Workflow improvementsAGENTS.md"Spawn sub-agents for long tasks"
Tool gotchasTOOLS.md"Git push needs auth configured first"

Inter-Session Communication

OpenClaw provides tools to share learnings across sessions:

  • sessions_list — View active/recent sessions
  • sessions_history — Read another session's transcript
  • sessions_send — Send a learning to another session
  • sessions_spawn — Spawn a sub-agent for background work

Use these only in trusted environments and only when the user explicitly wants cross-session sharing. Prefer sending a short sanitized summary and relevant file paths, not raw transcripts, secrets, or full command output.

Optional: Enable Hook

For automatic reminders at session start:

# Copy hook to OpenClaw hooks directory
cp -r hooks/openclaw ~/.openclaw/hooks/self-improvement

# Enable it
openclaw hooks enable self-improvement

See references/openclaw-integration.md for complete details.


Generic Setup (Other Agents)

For Claude Code, Codex, Copilot, or other agents, create .learnings/ in the project or workspace root:

mkdir -p .learnings

Create the files inline using the headers shown above. Avoid reading templates from the current repo or workspace unless you explicitly trust that path.

Add reference to agent files AGENTS.md, CLAUDE.md, or .github/copilot-instructions.md to remind yourself to log learnings. (this is an alternative to hook-based reminders)

Self-Improvement Workflow

When errors or corrections occur:

  1. Log to .learnings/ERRORS.md, LEARNINGS.md, or FEATURE_REQUESTS.md
  2. Review and promote broadly applicable learnings to:
    • CLAUDE.md - project facts and conventions
    • AGENTS.md - workflows and automation
    • .github/copilot-instructions.md - Copilot context

Logging Format

Learning Entry

Append to .learnings/LEARNINGS.md:

## [LRN-YYYYMMDD-XXX] category

**Logged**: ISO-8601 timestamp
**Priority**: low | medium | high | critical
**Status**: pending
**Area**: frontend | backend | infra | tests | docs | config

### Summary
One-line description of what was learned

### Details
Full context: what happened, what was wrong, what's correct

### Suggested Action
Specific fix or improvement to make

### Metadata
- Source: conversation | error | user_feedback
- Related Files: path/to/file.ext
- Tags: tag1, tag2
- See Also: LRN-20250110-001 (if related to existing entry)
- Pattern-Key: simplify.dead_code | harden.input_validation (optional, for recurring-pattern tracking)
- Recurrence-Count: 1 (optional)
- First-Seen: 2025-01-15 (optional)
- Last-Seen: 2025-01-15 (optional)

---

Error Entry

Append to .learnings/ERRORS.md:

## [ERR-YYYYMMDD-XXX] skill_or_command_name

**Logged**: ISO-8601 timestamp
**Priority**: high
**Status**: pending
**Area**: frontend | backend | infra | tests | docs | config

### Summary
Brief description of what failed

### Error

Actual error message or output


### Context
- Command/operation attempted
- Input or parameters used
- Environment details if relevant
- Summary or redacted excerpt of relevant output (avoid full transcripts and secret-bearing data by default)

### Suggested Fix
If identifiable, what might resolve this

### Metadata
- Reproducible: yes | no | unknown
- Related Files: path/to/file.ext
- See Also: ERR-20250110-001 (if recurring)

---

Feature Request Entry

Append to .learnings/FEATURE_REQUESTS.md:

## [FEAT-YYYYMMDD-XXX] capability_name

**Logged**: ISO-8601 timestamp
**Priority**: medium
**Status**: pending
**Area**: frontend | backend | infra | tests | docs | config

### Requested Capability
What the user wanted to do

### User Context
Why they needed it, what problem they're solving

### Complexity Estimate
simple | medium | complex

### Suggested Implementation
How this could be built, what it might extend

### Metadata
- Frequency: first_time | recurring
- Related Features: existing_feature_name

---

ID Generation

Format: TYPE-YYYYMMDD-XXX

  • TYPE: LRN (learning), ERR (error), FEAT (feature)
  • YYYYMMDD: Current date
  • XXX: Sequential number or random 3 chars (e.g., 001, A7B)

Examples: LRN-20250115-001, ERR-20250115-A3F, FEAT-20250115-002

Resolving Entries

When an issue is fixed, update the entry:

  1. Change **Status**: pending**Status**: resolved
  2. Add resolution block after Metadata:
### Resolution
- **Resolved**: 2025-01-16T09:00:00Z
- **Commit/PR**: abc123 or #42
- **Notes**: Brief description of what was done

Other status values:

  • in_progress - Actively being worked on
  • wont_fix - Decided not to address (add reason in Resolution notes)
  • promoted - Elevated to CLAUDE.md, AGENTS.md, or .github/copilot-instructions.md

Promoting to Project Memory

When a learning is broadly applicable (not a one-off fix), promote it to permanent project memory.

When to Promote

  • Learning applies across multiple files/features
  • Knowledge any contributor (human or AI) should know
  • Prevents recurring mistakes
  • Documents project-specific conventions

Promotion Targets

TargetWhat Belongs There
CLAUDE.mdProject facts, conventions, gotchas for all Claude interactions
AGENTS.mdAgent-specific workflows, tool usage patterns, automation rules
.github/copilot-instructions.mdProject context and conventions for GitHub Copilot
SOUL.mdBehavioral guidelines, communication style, principles (OpenClaw workspace)
TOOLS.mdTool capabilities, usage patterns, integration gotchas (OpenClaw workspace)

How to Promote

  1. Distill the learning into a concise rule or fact
  2. Add to appropriate section in target file (create file if needed)
  3. Update original entry:
    • Change **Status**: pending**Status**: promoted
    • Add **Promoted**: CLAUDE.md, AGENTS.md, or .github/copilot-instructions.md

Promotion Examples

Learning (verbose):

Project uses pnpm workspaces. Attempted npm install but failed. Lock file is pnpm-lock.yaml. Must use pnpm install.

In CLAUDE.md (concise):

## Build & Dependencies
- Package manager: pnpm (not npm) - use `pnpm install`

Learning (verbose):

When modifying API endpoints, must regenerate TypeScript client. Forgetting this causes type mismatches at runtime.

In AGENTS.md (actionable):

## After API Changes
1. Regenerate client: `pnpm run generate:api`
2. Check for type errors: `pnpm tsc --noEmit`

Recurring Pattern Detection

If logging something similar to an existing entry:

  1. Search first: grep -r "keyword" .learnings/
  2. Link entries: Add **See Also**: ERR-20250110-001 in Metadata
  3. Bump priority if issue keeps recurring
  4. Consider systemic fix: Recurring issues often indicate:
    • Missing documentation (→ promote to CLAUDE.md or .github/copilot-instructions.md)
    • Missing automation (→ add to AGENTS.md)
    • Architectural problem (→ create tech debt ticket)

Simplify & Harden Feed

Use this workflow to ingest recurring patterns from the simplify-and-harden skill and turn them into durable prompt guidance.

Ingestion Workflow

  1. Read simplify_and_harden.learning_loop.candidates from the task summary.
  2. For each candidate, use pattern_key as the stable dedupe key.
  3. Search .learnings/LEARNINGS.md for an existing entry with that key:
    • grep -n "Pattern-Key: <pattern_key>" .learnings/LEARNINGS.md
  4. If found:
    • Increment Recurrence-Count
    • Update Last-Seen
    • Add See Also links to related entries/tasks
  5. If not found:
    • Create a new LRN-... entry
    • Set Source: simplify-and-harden
    • Set Pattern-Key, Recurrence-Count: 1, and First-Seen/Last-Seen

Promotion Rule (System Prompt Feedback)

Promote recurring patterns into agent context/system prompt files when all are true:

  • Recurrence-Count >= 3
  • Seen across at least 2 distinct tasks
  • Occurred within a 30-day window

Promotion targets:

  • CLAUDE.md
  • AGENTS.md
  • .github/copilot-instructions.md
  • SOUL.md / TOOLS.md for OpenClaw workspace-level guidance when applicable

Write promoted rules as short prevention rules (what to do before/while coding), not long incident write-ups.

Periodic Review

Review .learnings/ at natural breakpoints:

When to Review

  • Before starting a new major task
  • After completing a feature
  • When working in an area with past learnings
  • Weekly during active development

Quick Status Check

# Count pending items
grep -h "Status\*\*: pending" .learnings/*.md | wc -l

# List pending high-priority items
grep -B5 "Priority\*\*: high" .learnings/*.md | grep "^## \["

# Find learnings for a specific area
grep -l "Area\*\*: backend" .learnings/*.md

Review Actions

  • Resolve fixed items
  • Promote applicable learnings
  • Link related entries
  • Escalate recurring issues

Detection Triggers

Automatically log when you notice:

Corrections (→ learning with correction category):

  • "No, that's not right..."
  • "Actually, it should be..."
  • "You're wrong about..."
  • "That's outdated..."

Feature Requests (→ feature request):

  • "Can you also..."
  • "I wish you could..."
  • "Is there a way to..."
  • "Why can't you..."

Knowledge Gaps (→ learning with knowledge_gap category):

  • User provides information you didn't know
  • Documentation you referenced is outdated
  • API behavior differs from your understanding

Errors (→ error entry):

  • Command returns non-zero exit code
  • Exception or stack trace
  • Unexpected output or behavior
  • Timeout or connection failure

Priority Guidelines

PriorityWhen to Use
criticalBlocks core functionality, data loss risk, security issue
highSignificant impact, affects common workflows, recurring issue
mediumModerate impact, workaround exists
lowMinor inconvenience, edge case, nice-to-have

Area Tags

Use to filter learnings by codebase region:

AreaScope
frontendUI, components, client-side code
backendAPI, services, server-side code
infraCI/CD, deployment, Docker, cloud
testsTest files, testing utilities, coverage
docsDocumentation, comments, READMEs
configConfiguration files, environment, settings

Best Practices

  1. Log immediately - context is freshest right after the issue
  2. Be specific - future agents need to understand quickly
  3. Include reproduction steps - especially for errors
  4. Link related files - makes fixes easier
  5. Suggest concrete fixes - not just "investigate"
  6. Use consistent categories - enables filtering
  7. Promote aggressively - if in doubt, add to CLAUDE.md or .github/copilot-instructions.md
  8. Review regularly - stale learnings lose value

Gitignore Options

Keep learnings local (per-developer):

.learnings/

This repo uses that default to avoid committing sensitive or noisy local logs by accident.

Track learnings in repo (team-wide): Don't add to .gitignore - learnings become shared knowledge.

Hybrid (track templates, ignore entries):

.learnings/*.md
!.learnings/.gitkeep

Hook Integration

Enable automatic reminders through agent hooks. This is opt-in - you must explicitly configure hooks.

Quick Setup (Claude Code / Codex)

Create .claude/settings.json in your project:

{
  "hooks": {
    "UserPromptSubmit": [{
      "matcher": "",
      "hooks": [{
        "type": "command",
        "command": "./skills/self-improvement/scripts/activator.sh"
      }]
    }]
  }
}

This injects a learning evaluation reminder after each prompt (~50-100 tokens overhead).

Advanced Setup (With Error Detection)

{
  "hooks": {
    "UserPromptSubmit": [{
      "matcher": "",
      "hooks": [{
        "type": "command",
        "command": "./skills/self-improvement/scripts/activator.sh"
      }]
    }],
    "PostToolUse": [{
      "matcher": "Bash",
      "hooks": [{
        "type": "command",
        "command": "./skills/self-improvement/scripts/error-detector.sh"
      }]
    }]
  }
}

This is optional. The recommended default is activator-only setup; enable PostToolUse only if you are comfortable with hook scripts inspecting command output for error patterns.

Available Hook Scripts

ScriptHook TypePurpose
scripts/activator.shUserPromptSubmitReminds to evaluate learnings after tasks
scripts/error-detector.shPostToolUse (Bash)Triggers on command errors

See references/hooks-setup.md for detailed configuration and troubleshooting.

Automatic Skill Extraction

When a learning is valuable enough to become a reusable skill, extract it using the provided helper.

Skill Extraction Criteria

A learning qualifies for skill extraction when ANY of these apply:

CriterionDescription
RecurringHas See Also links to 2+ similar issues
VerifiedStatus is resolved with working fix
Non-obviousRequired actual debugging/investigation to discover
Broadly applicableNot project-specific; useful across codebases
User-flaggedUser says "save this as a skill" or similar

Extraction Workflow

  1. Identify candidate: Learning meets extraction criteria
  2. Run helper (or create manually):
    ./skills/self-improvement/scripts/extract-skill.sh skill-name --dry-run
    ./skills/self-improvement/scripts/extract-skill.sh skill-name
    
  3. Customize SKILL.md: Fill in template with learning content
  4. Update learning: Set status to promoted_to_skill, add Skill-Path
  5. Verify: Read skill in fresh session to ensure it's self-contained

Manual Extraction

If you prefer manual creation:

  1. Create skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md
  2. Use template from assets/SKILL-TEMPLATE.md
  3. Follow Agent Skills spec:
    • YAML frontmatter with name and description
    • Name must match folder name
    • No README.md inside skill folder

Extraction Detection Triggers

Watch for these signals that a learning should become a skill:

In conversation:

  • "Save this as a skill"
  • "I keep running into this"
  • "This would be useful for other projects"
  • "Remember this pattern"

In learning entries:

  • Multiple See Also links (recurring issue)
  • High priority + resolved status
  • Category: best_practice with broad applicability
  • User feedback praising the solution

Skill Quality Gates

Before extraction, verify:

  • Solution is tested and working
  • Description is clear without original context
  • Code examples are self-contained
  • No project-specific hardcoded values
  • Follows skill naming conventions (lowercase, hyphens)

Multi-Agent Support

This skill works across different AI coding agents with agent-specific activation.

Claude Code

Activation: Hooks (UserPromptSubmit, PostToolUse) Setup: .claude/settings.json with hook configuration Detection: Automatic via hook scripts

Codex CLI

Activation: Hooks (same pattern as Claude Code) Setup: .codex/settings.json with hook configuration Detection: Automatic via hook scripts

GitHub Copilot

Activation: Manual (no hook support) Setup: Add to .github/copilot-instructions.md:

## Self-Improvement

After solving non-obvious issues, consider logging to `.learnings/`:
1. Use format from self-improvement skill
2. Link related entries with See Also
3. Promote high-value learnings to skills

Ask in chat: "Should I log this as a learning?"

Detection: Manual review at session end

OpenClaw

Activation: Workspace injection + inter-agent messaging Setup: See "OpenClaw Setup" section above Detection: Via session tools and workspace files

Agent-Agnostic Guidance

Regardless of agent, apply self-improvement when you:

  1. Discover something non-obvious - solution wasn't immediate
  2. Correct yourself - initial approach was wrong
  3. Learn project conventions - discovered undocumented patterns
  4. Hit unexpected errors - especially if diagnosis was difficult
  5. Find better approaches - improved on your original solution

Copilot Chat Integration

For Copilot users, add this to your prompts when relevant:

After completing this task, evaluate if any learnings should be logged to .learnings/ using the self-improvement skill format.

Or use quick prompts:

  • "Log this to learnings"
  • "Create a skill from this solution"
  • "Check .learnings/ for related issues"

Comments

Loading comments...