I don't believe you deserve the downvotes you're getting. Sometimes a good joke is so good that it appears shallow at first glance, but only upon reflection does the true humor show through. A shallow callout such as yours is sometimes necessary to call the reader back to it for that further reflection.
claude package has ten new versions published per week, and one new model every few months, one should definitely not rely on some undocumented tricks around it: it'll change, it'll break deep ultra-specific configurations
anuramat [3 hidden]5 mins ago
in my experience, "undocumented tricks" break as often as documented features
like when they removed "clear context and execute plan" option after releasing 1M opus because "context window is not a problem anymore"
calgoo [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I so miss that clear context and execute plan mode! Now i have to keep clearing it manually again.
anuramat [3 hidden]5 mins ago
fyi you can re-enable it with `{ "showClearContextOnPlanAccept": true }` in ${CLAUDE_CONFIG_DIR:-$HOME/.claude}/settings.json
also find `"disableAutoMode": "disable"` useful, since I'm typically switching between yolo and plan
bredren [3 hidden]5 mins ago
It is possible to build automation that efficiently handles low level customization of new versions as they appear.
tstrimple [3 hidden]5 mins ago
This is true, but also "temporal hacks" can make or break "cutting edge" workflows. I don't re-architect my claude instructions every release. But some releases justify examining your existing instructions and making sure they still fit the current model. And it has made a noticeable difference.
bsenftner [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Is there an AI Coding Agent application structure emerging that is more or less universal across llm models? Is anyone collecting and writing on how to understand this architectural style?
joka88xj [3 hidden]5 mins ago
The pattern across Claude Code, Codex and Cursor does seem to be converging: gather context, make a plan, execute, then verify.
What feels less standardized is how much control the user gets between those stages. Settings like showClearContextOnPlanAccept and disableAutoMode are interesting because they expose that boundary between “agent decides” and “human reviews before execution.”
That seems like the part where different coding agents will continue to feel very different in practice.
giraffe_lady [3 hidden]5 mins ago
> Is anyone collecting and writing on how to understand this architectural style?
Are we on the same site? Is anyone writing about anything else?
chasd00 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
can i ask claude to generate its own config? "you're me, create your perfect set of config files."
drowsspa [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Yeah I'd love to see a cookie cutter project with all of the best practices of the boilerplate files
gwerbin [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Probably. It does seem to have a built-in tool for exploring its own docs, and it has a special mode for working in a .claude/ directory. It's probably intended that users do this.
mastax [3 hidden]5 mins ago
There’s a slash command that’ll look through your conversation history to add allow permissions.
mohsen1 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
> Honest status
> Not at 100% - and I want to be straight about why that's a longer road...
I just want Claude Code to stop giving up on achieving tasks. It's so annoying. Even with `/goal` or the new `ultracode` it gives up constantly.
My project is very complex (https://github.com/mohsen1/tsz) but Codex has no problem keep grinding without stopping like that
skerit [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I just use /loop now which gives it a motivational prompt to keep the fuck going. Goal can be used too, but for some things a simple loop is better
MattGaiser [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Yeah, I just had Claude fill out the task list, and then before hitting the end of the task list ask whether I wanted to continue or whether getting some of it done was enough....
withinboredom [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Never. Ever. Ever. Tell Claude you have a deadline. It will do this on every task. It will half-ass things to “get it done in time” and argue about whether or not an approach will be done “on time” because it is estimating in human hours.
sheept [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I'm curious about that "magic doc" feature. Is that meant to go in CLAUDE.md or a project file? Does the file need to be mentioned during the session or does Claude automatically search for all mentions of the "magic doc" header in the project?
My_Name [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Anyone else pick up on the fact that the article was released on Apr 01, 2026?
My_Name [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I decided to grep the actual binary to check. The current version is 2.1.156, but the post is based on 2.1.87.
Most of it holds up in 2.1.156: the hook response fields (updatedInput, permissionDecision, additionalContext, watchPaths, etc.), extra hook config fields (once, asyncRewake), skill/agent frontmatter (omitClaudeMd, criticalSystemReminder_EXPERIMENTAL, memory, color, context: fork), and autoMode/autoMemoryEnabled/autoDreamEnabled all show up as real Zod-schema config keys, not stray strings. autoMode has the allow/soft_deny/environment shape, plus an undocumented hard_deny.
Two things from the post I couldn't find in 2.1.156: yoloClassifier (the closest flag now is yoloEquivEnabled) and "Magic Docs" / the # MAGIC DOC: regex (the only MAGIC strings left are about file magic bytes).
fg137 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Have fun finding out that the undocumented feature you rely on suddenly stops working.
quantumleaper [3 hidden]5 mins ago
If software engineering were truly solved, like Anthropic claims, anyone could just vibecode it back. If only they stopped being allergic to the word "open" and open-sourced Claude Code, which, at this point, there is no practical reason not to.
cheschire [3 hidden]5 mins ago
There are numerous copies of the source available for claude code now that it has been leaked. The vast majority of what makes CC useful is already present, and it's unlikely that any killer features will be added going forward.
So it's already possible for someone to "vibecode it back". It's just perhaps not legal.
MrOrelliOReilly [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Clearly AI-generated writing (confirmed with Pangram). Amazed this has so many upvotes—are people even reading the article?
@dang I know you have so far resisted a rule for AI-generated content (as we now have for comments), but I personally would prefer a flag for articles so that I don't waste my time on slop.
0123456789ABCDE [3 hidden]5 mins ago
most of these are in fact documented, the rest either no longer exists, is still gated by feature flags (i checked), or has little use to most users.
you can however convince claude to create a local command with the extracted prompts for stuff like autodream
47282847 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
What’s up with scrolling on that page?! I was locked into a page region several times until I finally gave up. Safari/Orion iOS current
steve1977 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Maybe programmed with Claude Code?
FinnKuhn [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Substack is such a big platform that they should have resources to make sure their product works fine on common device/browser combinations.
steve1977 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
I'm not sure how much leeway creators have in customizing their substacks to be honest (if they can use custom CSS for example).
That example classifier is horrendous. A simple substring search for ls/cat/echo/etc?
chrismarlow9 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
surely concats of user input, stdout of external dependencies, and non-deterministic output feeding back directly to an eval is safe. it's never been a problem before. not even trying to check the boxes when it comes to security anymore.
Tyr42 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Can I do
echo blah blah >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
And that'd be auto approved?
anuramat [3 hidden]5 mins ago
still, far more effective than "NEVER FUCKING GUESS"
NamlchakKhandro [3 hidden]5 mins ago
[flagged]
UqWBcuFx6NV4r [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Please stick to intelligent replies. Many people here aren’t interested in whatever culture war you feel like fighting today.
LoganDark [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Zealous bigotry like this only serves to give pi a bad reputation. Comments like this hinder your apparent goal.
auspiv [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Wow, not one mention of the env vars that have a far greater influence on how the models actually work under the hood - https://code.claude.com/docs/en/env-vars
Very important for bedrock deployments and other not-as-standard deployments
Key for how I've deployed it - disable adaptive thinking, max thinking tokens, disable telemetry, etc
simlevesque [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Article name: "everything the doc doesn't mention"
You: "they missed this feature that's in the docs !"
You're right that it's an important part of CC's config. But it doesn't fit the article's raison d'être.
Jcampuzano2 [3 hidden]5 mins ago
Adaptive thinking isn't configurable if you're using 4.7 or higher though, so anybody on modern opus its basically useless.
like when they removed "clear context and execute plan" option after releasing 1M opus because "context window is not a problem anymore"
also find `"disableAutoMode": "disable"` useful, since I'm typically switching between yolo and plan
What feels less standardized is how much control the user gets between those stages. Settings like showClearContextOnPlanAccept and disableAutoMode are interesting because they expose that boundary between “agent decides” and “human reviews before execution.”
That seems like the part where different coding agents will continue to feel very different in practice.
Are we on the same site? Is anyone writing about anything else?
> Not at 100% - and I want to be straight about why that's a longer road...
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/961eff6c-0060-45d...
I just want Claude Code to stop giving up on achieving tasks. It's so annoying. Even with `/goal` or the new `ultracode` it gives up constantly.
My project is very complex (https://github.com/mohsen1/tsz) but Codex has no problem keep grinding without stopping like that
Most of it holds up in 2.1.156: the hook response fields (updatedInput, permissionDecision, additionalContext, watchPaths, etc.), extra hook config fields (once, asyncRewake), skill/agent frontmatter (omitClaudeMd, criticalSystemReminder_EXPERIMENTAL, memory, color, context: fork), and autoMode/autoMemoryEnabled/autoDreamEnabled all show up as real Zod-schema config keys, not stray strings. autoMode has the allow/soft_deny/environment shape, plus an undocumented hard_deny.
Two things from the post I couldn't find in 2.1.156: yoloClassifier (the closest flag now is yoloEquivEnabled) and "Magic Docs" / the # MAGIC DOC: regex (the only MAGIC strings left are about file magic bytes).
So it's already possible for someone to "vibecode it back". It's just perhaps not legal.
@dang I know you have so far resisted a rule for AI-generated content (as we now have for comments), but I personally would prefer a flag for articles so that I don't waste my time on slop.
you can however convince claude to create a local command with the extracted prompts for stuff like autodream
(It's not easy to find though, and lots of other docs doesn't mention it or link to this)
The Claude Code Source Leak: fake tools, frustration regexes, undercover mode
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47586778
Very important for bedrock deployments and other not-as-standard deployments
Key for how I've deployed it - disable adaptive thinking, max thinking tokens, disable telemetry, etc
You: "they missed this feature that's in the docs !"
You're right that it's an important part of CC's config. But it doesn't fit the article's raison d'être.
https://code.claude.com/docs/en/model-config#adaptive-reason...
> Opus 4.7 and later always use adaptive reasoning. The fixed thinking budget mode and CLAUDE_CODE_DISABLE_ADAPTIVE_THINKING do not apply to them.