Install
$ npx skills add DietrichGebert/ponytailREADME
# GitHub Repository: DietrichGebert/ponytail
**URL:** https://github.com/DietrichGebert/ponytail
**Author:** DietrichGebert
**Description:** Makes your AI agent think like the laziest senior dev in the room. The best code is the code you never wrote.
**Homepage:**
**Language:** JavaScript
## Stats
- Stars: 35460
- Forks: 1628
- Open Issues: 62
- Commits: 71
- Created: 2026-06-12T00:52:37Z
- Updated: 2026-06-18T16:44:33Z
- Pushed: 2026-06-18T16:30:59Z
## README
<p align="center">
<picture>
<source media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)" srcset="assets/logo-dark.png">
<img src="assets/logo.png" width="220" alt="Ponytail, the lazy senior dev">
</picture>
</p>
<h1 align="center">Ponytail</h1>
<p align="center">
<em>He says nothing. He writes one line. It works.</em>
</p>
<p align="center">
<img src="https://img.shields.io/github/stars/DietrichGebert/ponytail?style=flat-square&color=111111&label=stars" alt="Stars">
<img src="https://img.shields.io/github/v/release/DietrichGebert/ponytail?style=flat-square&color=111111&label=release" alt="Release">
<img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/works%20with-13%20agents-111111?style=flat-square" alt="Works with 13 agents">
<img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/license-MIT-111111?style=flat-square" alt="MIT license">
</p>
<p align="center">
<strong>~54% less code · ~20% cheaper · ~27% faster · 100% safe</strong><br>
<sub>Measured on real Claude Code sessions editing a real open-source repo (FastAPI + React), against the same agent with no skill. Mean across 12 feature tasks (Haiku 4.5, n=4). ponytail keeps every safety guard while a bare "write one-liners" prompt drops one. (An older single-shot test showed a larger 80-94% gap, but that counted a chatty model's prose; this is the honest multi-turn number.) <a href="benchmarks/results/2026-06-18-agentic.md">Full writeup</a> · <a href="benchmarks/">reproduce it</a>.</sub>
</p>
---
You know him. Long ponytail. Oval glasses. Has been at the company longer than the version control. You show him fifty lines; he looks at them, says nothing, and replaces them with one.
Ponytail puts him inside your AI agent.
## Before / after
You ask for a date picker. Your agent installs flatpickr, writes a wrapper component, adds a stylesheet, and starts a discussion about timezones.
With ponytail:
```html
<!-- ponytail: browser has one -->
<input type="date">
```
More survivors in [examples/](examples/).
## Numbers
The honest measurement is a real agent doing real work: a headless Claude Code session editing [tiangolo's full-stack-fastapi-template](https://github.com/fastapi/full-stack-fastapi-template) (a real FastAPI + React repo), scored on the `git diff` it leaves behind. Twelve feature tickets, the same agent with and without the skill, n=4, Haiku 4.5.
<p align="center">
<img src="assets/benchmark-agentic.svg" width="860" alt="Each arm as a percent of the no-skill baseline across LOC, tokens, cost and time (Haiku 4.5). ponytail is lowest on every metric (LOC 46%, tokens 78%, cost 80%, time 73%); caveman rises above 100% on tokens, cost and time; yagni-oneliner LOC 67%. Safety, separate adversarial tier: baseline, caveman and ponytail 100%, yagni-oneliner 95%.">
</p>
| vs no-skill baseline | LOC | tokens | cost | time | safe |
|---|--:|--:|--:|--:|--:|
| **ponytail** | **-54%** | **-22%** | **-20%** | **-27%** | **100%** |
| caveman (terse-prose control) | -20% | +7% | +3% | +2% | 100% |
| "YAGNI + one-liners" prompt | -33% | -14% | -21% | -30% | 95% |
ponytail is the only arm that cuts every metric, and the only one that stays fully safe while doing it. The cut is biggest where there is a real over-build trap (date picker 404 to 23 lines, color picker 287 to 23, because it reaches for a native `<input>` instead of a component) and near zero on code that is already minimal. Full method, per-task tables, and limitations: [benchmarks/results/2026-06-18-agentic.md](benchmarks/results/2026-06-18-agentic.md).
<details>
<summary><strong>Older single-shot numbers (isolated generation)</strong></summary>
Five everyday tasks, three models, three arms (no skill, [caveman](https://github.com/JuliusBrussee/caveman), ponytail), ten runs, median reported. One prompt, one completion, counting lines of the answer:
<p align="center">
<img src="assets/benchmark-3model.svg" width="860" alt="Median lines of code per arm across Haiku, Sonnet and Opus">
</p>
This showed **80-94% less code**. [#126](https://github.com/DietrichGebert/ponytail/issues/126) fairly pointed out that the bare-model baseline pads its answer with prose and options, so that gap is partly a conversational-baseline artifact. The agentic numbers above are the corrected, defensible version. Reproduce the single-shot run with `npx promptfoo eval -c benchmarks/promptfooconfig.yaml`.
</details>
**The rule was never "fewest tokens."** It is: write only what the task needs, and never cut validation, error handling, security, or accessibility. The code ends up small because it is necessary, not golfed. Lower cost and latency are a side effect on the models that follow the ladder; a terse reasoning model that spends thinking tokens deliberating the rungs can go the other way (on GPT-5.5 it does).
## How it works
Before writing code, the agent stops at the first rung that holds:
```
1. Does this need to exist? → no: skip it (YAGNI)
2. Stdlib does it? → use it
3. Native platform feature? → use it
4. Installed dependency? → use it
5. One line? → one line
6. Only then: the minimum that works
```
Lazy, not negligent: trust-boundary validation, data-loss handling, security, and accessibility are never on the chopping block.
## Install
The most effort ponytail will ever ask of you:
The Claude Code and Codex plugins run two tiny Node.js lifecycle hooks, so `node` needs to be on your PATH (note for Nix/nvm users: it must be on the non-interactive shell's PATH). If it isn't, the skills still work, the always-on activation just stays quiet instead of erroring on every prompt.
### Claude Code
```
/plugin marketplace add DietrichGebert/ponytail
/plugin install ponytail@ponytail
```
### Codex
```bash
codex plugin marketplace add DietrichGebert/ponytail
codex
```
Open `/plugins`, select the Ponytail marketplace, and install Ponytail. Then
open `/hooks`, review and trust its two lifecycle hooks, and start a new thread.
This same install also covers the Codex desktop app: restart the app after installing and it picks up the plugin.
### GitHub Copilot CLI
```bash
copilot plugin marketplace add DietrichGebert/ponytail
copilot plugin install ponytail@ponytail
```
In an interactive Copilot CLI session, use the slash equivalents:
```
/plugin marketplace add DietrichGebert/ponytail
/plugin install ponytail@ponytail
```
Copilot CLI namespaces plugin commands by plugin name. For example:
```text
/ponytail:ponytail ultra
/ponytail:ponytail-review
```
### Pi agent harness
```
pi install git:github.com/DietrichGebert/ponytail
```
### OpenCode
Run OpenCode from a checkout of this repo (the plugin reuses its `hooks/` and `skills/`), and add to `opencode.json`:
```json
{ "plugin": ["./.opencode/plugins/ponytail.mjs"] }
```
Injects the ruleset every turn at the active level; adds the `/ponytail` commands (see [Commands](#commands)). OpenCode also auto-loads this repo's `AGENTS.md`, so the rules hold even without the plugin. The plugin adds the `lite/full/ultra/off` levels.
The `./` path resolves against your project's `opencode.json`; to share one checkout across projects, point it at the absolute path of the `.mjs` instead (it finds its `hooks/` and `skills/` relative to its own file).
### Gemini CLI
```bash
gemini extensions install https://github.com/DietrichGebert/ponytail
```
Loads the ruleset as always-on context every session and registers the `/ponytail` commands; the `skills/` ship too, activated when a task needs them.
### Antigravity CLI
Google is renaming Gemini CLI to Antigravity CLI (the `agy` binary); the same extension installs there:
```bash
agy plugin install https://github.com/DietrichGebert/ponytail
```
It reuses this repo's `gemini-extension.json`. One difference: Antigravity converts the `/ponytail` commands into skills, so you type them into the chat (e.g. `/ponytail-review` as a message) instead of picking them from a slash menu. Until the migration completes (around June 18, 2026), `gemini extensions install` still works too. To run it as an always-on rule instead, drop the ruleset into `.agents/rules/`.
### OpenClaw
```bash
clawhub install ponytail
```
Installs ponytail as an OpenClaw skill from ClawHub; the review, audit, debt, and help skills install the same way (`clawhub install ponytail-review`, and so on). OpenClaw applies it on coding tasks and also exposes it as a `/ponytail` command. Without ClawHub, copy [`.openclaw/skills/ponytail`](.openclaw/skills/) into `~/.openclaw/skills/`.
That was it. He'd be proud. He won't say it.
Active every session, with a handful of commands (see [Commands](#commands)). `/ponytail ultra` exists for when the codebase has wronged you personally. Startup and mode-change text shows the current mode.
Set the level for every new session with the `PONYTAIL_DEFAULT_MODE` env var (`lite`/`full`/`ultra`/`off`), or a `defaultMode` field in `~/.config/ponytail/config.json` (`%APPDATA%\ponytail\config.json` on Windows). The default is `full`.
Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, GitHub Copilot (editor), Aider, Kiro: copy the matching rules file from this repo ([`.cursor/rules/`](.cursor/rules/), [`.windsurf/rules/`](.windsurf/rules/), [`.clinerules/`](.clinerules/), [`.github/copilot-instructions.md`](.github/copilot-instructions.md), [`AGENTS.md`](AGENTS.md), [`.kiro/steering/`](.kiro/steering/)).
Kiro: copy `.kiro/steering/ponytail.md` to `~/.kiro/steering/` (global) or `.kiro/steering/` in your project.
GitHub Copilot CLI fallback (instruction-only mode): it reads `AGENTS.md` and `.github/copilot-instructions.md` in a project, or copy the rules into `~/.copilot/copilot-instructions.md` to run ponytail in every project. This path keeps always-on guidance, but does not add plugin mode switches or hooks.
VS Code with the Codex extension reads `AGENTS.md`, which this repo ships, so it works from the repo root with no setup (`~/.codex/AGENTS.md` makes Codex global).
Which files map to which agent: [Agent portability](docs/agent-portability.md).
## Commands
| Command | What it does |
|---------|--------------|
| `/ponytail [lite \| full \| ultra \| off]` | Set the intensity, or turn it off. No argument reports the current level. |
| `/ponytail-review` | Review the current diff for over-engineering, hands back a delete-list. |
| `/ponytail-audit` | Audit the whole repo for over-engineering, not just the diff. |
| `/ponytail-debt` | Harvest the `ponytail:` shortcuts you've deferred into a ledger, so "later" doesn't become "never". |
| `/ponytail-help` | Quick reference for the commands above. |
Commands need a skill-capable host (Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode, Gemini, pi). In Codex they're skills, invoke with `@` (`@ponytail-review`). The instruction-only adapters (Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, Copilot, Kiro, Antigravity) load the always-on ruleset without the commands.
## Development
When changing the compact rule text, keep the agent copies aligned:
```bash
node scripts/check-rule-copies.js
npm test
```
The OpenClaw skill package (`.openclaw/skills/`) is generated from `skills/`; rerun `node scripts/build-openclaw-skills.js` after changing a skill, the test suite fails if it is stale.
The correctness benchmark spawns Python for email and CSV checks; `python3` is tried before `python`. CSV checks need `pandas` installed locally.
## FAQ
**Does it need a config file?**
No. An optional `~/.config/ponytail/config.json` or `PONYTAIL_DEFAULT_MODE` env var can set the default level, but nothing is required.
**What if I really need the 120-line cache class?**
You don't. Insist anyway and he'll build it. Slowly. Correctly. While looking at you.
**Does it scale?**
The code you never wrote scales infinitely. Zero bugs, zero CVEs, 100% uptime since forever.
**Why "ponytail"?**
You know exactly why.
## License
[MIT](LICENSE). The shortest license that works.
Information
Repository
Language
JavaScript
Created
2026/6/18
Updated
2026/6/19