you-might-not-need-a-memo — agent-workflow you-might-not-need-a-memo, community, agent-workflow, ide skills, agentic-workflow, aiagents, anthropic, artificial-intelligence, chatbot, deepseek, Claude Code

v1.0.0

About this Skill

Build, deploy, and orchestrate AI agents. Sim is the central intelligence layer for your AI workforce.

# Core Topics

simstudioai simstudioai
[27.8k]
[3522]
Updated: 4/15/2026

Killer-Skills Review

Decision support comes first. Repository text comes second.

Reference-Only Page Review Score: 1/11

This page remains useful for operators, but Killer-Skills treats it as reference material instead of a primary organic landing page.

Locale and body language aligned
Review Score
1/11
Quality Score
30
Canonical Locale
en
Detected Body Locale
en

Build, deploy, and orchestrate AI agents. Sim is the central intelligence layer for your AI workforce.

Core Value

Build, deploy, and orchestrate AI agents. Sim is the central intelligence layer for your AI workforce.

Ideal Agent Persona

Suitable for operator workflows that need explicit guardrails before installation and execution.

Capabilities Granted for you-might-not-need-a-memo

! Prerequisites & Limits

Why this page is reference-only

  • - The page lacks a strong recommendation layer.
  • - The page lacks concrete use-case guidance.
  • - The page lacks explicit limitations or caution signals.
  • - The underlying skill quality score is below the review floor.

Source Boundary

The section below is imported from the upstream repository and should be treated as secondary evidence. Use the Killer-Skills review above as the primary layer for fit, risk, and installation decisions.

After The Review

Decide The Next Action Before You Keep Reading Repository Material

Killer-Skills should not stop at opening repository instructions. It should help you decide whether to install this skill, when to cross-check against trusted collections, and when to move into workflow rollout.

Labs Demo

Browser Sandbox Environment

⚡️ Ready to unleash?

Experience this Agent in a zero-setup browser environment powered by WebContainers. No installation required.

Boot Container Sandbox

FAQ & Installation Steps

These questions and steps mirror the structured data on this page for better search understanding.

? Frequently Asked Questions

What is you-might-not-need-a-memo?

Build, deploy, and orchestrate AI agents. Sim is the central intelligence layer for your AI workforce.

How do I install you-might-not-need-a-memo?

Run the command: npx killer-skills add simstudioai/sim. It works with Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code, Claude Code, and 19+ other IDEs.

Which IDEs are compatible with you-might-not-need-a-memo?

This skill is compatible with Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code, Trae, Claude Code, OpenClaw, Aider, Codex, OpenCode, Goose, Cline, Roo Code, Kiro, Augment Code, Continue, GitHub Copilot, Sourcegraph Cody, and Amazon Q Developer. Use the Killer-Skills CLI for universal one-command installation.

How To Install

  1. 1. Open your terminal

    Open the terminal or command line in your project directory.

  2. 2. Run the install command

    Run: npx killer-skills add simstudioai/sim. The CLI will automatically detect your IDE or AI agent and configure the skill.

  3. 3. Start using the skill

    The skill is now active. Your AI agent can use you-might-not-need-a-memo immediately in the current project.

! Reference-Only Mode

This page remains useful for installation and reference, but Killer-Skills no longer treats it as a primary indexable landing page. Read the review above before relying on the upstream repository instructions.

Upstream Repository Material

The section below is imported from the upstream repository and should be treated as secondary evidence. Use the Killer-Skills review above as the primary layer for fit, risk, and installation decisions.

Upstream Source

you-might-not-need-a-memo

Install you-might-not-need-a-memo, an AI agent skill for AI agent workflows and automation. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf with one-command...

SKILL.md
Readonly
Upstream Repository Material
The section below is imported from the upstream repository and should be treated as secondary evidence. Use the Killer-Skills review above as the primary layer for fit, risk, and installation decisions.
Supporting Evidence

You Might Not Need a Memo

Arguments:

  • scope: what to analyze (default: your current changes). Examples: "diff to main", "PR #123", "src/components/", "whole codebase"
  • fix: whether to apply fixes (default: true). Set to false to only propose changes.

User arguments: $ARGUMENTS

References

Read before analyzing:

  1. https://overreacted.io/before-you-memo/ — two techniques to avoid memo entirely

Anti-patterns to detect

  1. Wrapping a slow component in React.memo when state can be moved down: If a component re-renders because of state it doesn't use, move that state into a smaller child component instead of memoizing. The slow component stops re-rendering without memo.
  2. Wrapping in React.memo when children can be lifted up: If a parent owns state that changes frequently, extract the stateful part and pass the expensive subtree as children. Children passed as props don't re-render when the parent's state changes.
  3. useMemo on cheap computations: Filtering or mapping a small array, string concatenation, simple arithmetic — these don't need memoization. Only memoize when you've measured a performance problem.
  4. useMemo with constantly-changing deps: If the dependency array changes on every render, useMemo does nothing — it recalculates every time. Fix the deps or remove the memo.
  5. useMemo to create objects/arrays passed as props: Instead of memoizing to prevent child re-renders, consider whether the child even needs referential stability. If the child doesn't use React.memo or pass it to a dep array, the memo is wasted.
  6. React.memo on components that always receive new props: If the parent always passes new objects, arrays, or callbacks, React.memo's shallow comparison always fails. Fix the parent instead of memoizing the child.
  7. useMemo for derived state: If you're computing a value from props or state, just compute it inline during render. React renders are fast. const fullName = first + ' ' + last doesn't need useMemo.

Steps

  1. Read the reference above to understand the two core techniques (move state down, lift content up)
  2. Analyze the specified scope for the anti-patterns listed above
  3. If fix=true, apply the fixes. If fix=false, propose the fixes without applying.

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