AugmentClaude

Agent Carnet

Save and recall notes across conversations with automatic archival.

Installation

  1. Make sure Claude is on your device and in your terminal.

    Skills load from ~/.claude/skills/ when Claude Code starts up — so you need it on your machine first. If you don't have it yet, install it once with the command below, then run claude in any terminal to verify.

    One-time setup
    npm i -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code

    Already have it? Skip ahead.

  2. Paste into Claude Code or into your terminal.

    This copies the whole skill folder into ~/.claude/skills/agent-carnet-yamadashy/ — the SKILL.md plus any scripts, reference docs, or templates the skill ships with. Safe default: works for every skill.

    Faster alternative (instruction-only skills)

    Skips the clone and grabs only the SKILL.md file. Don't use this if the skill ships Python scripts, reference markdowns, or asset templates — they won't be downloaded and the skill will fail when it tries to load them.

    Quick install (SKILL.md only)
    Sign up to copy
  3. Restart Claude Code.

    Quit and reopen Claude Code (or any other agent that loads from ~/.claude/skills/). New skills are picked up on startup.

  4. Just ask Claude.

    Skills auto-activate when your request matches the skill's description — no slash command needed. Trigger phrases live in the skill's own frontmatter; you can read them in the “What this skill does” section above.

Prefer to read the source first? Open on GitHub.

When Claude uses it

Use this skill when the user asks to save, recall, find, or organize notes. Triggers on: 'remember this', 'save this', 'note this', 'what did we discuss about...', 'check the notebook', 'find in carnet'. Also use proactively when discovering findings worth preserving across sessions.

What this skill does

Agent Carnet

A tiny CLI that gives you a shared markdown notebook on disk under .carnet/<category>/<slug>.md. Notes have a 30-day default lifespan that resets every time they are read or applied; useful ones survive, stale ones drift to .trash/ automatically.

Quick reference

# Save (always pass --summary and --agent claude-code)
echo "body content" | agent-carnet save deps/iconv-issue \
  --summary "iconv-esm v0.7 types broken — pin to v0.6" \
  --agent claude-code \
  --tags compat,esm

# Recall
agent-carnet find iconv               # search summaries (does NOT bump lifespan)
agent-carnet list                     # category-grouped overview, sorted by last_used
agent-carnet list --sort use_count    # most-applied notes first
agent-carnet show deps/iconv-issue    # read full content (bumps last_used; weak use signal)

# Mark as actually applied (strong use signal — bumps last_used + use_count)
agent-carnet used deps/iconv-issue

# Maintain
agent-carnet move <from> <to>
agent-carnet rm <path> --yes

When unsure of a subcommand's full flag set, run agent-carnet <command> -h (e.g. agent-carnet save -h, agent-carnet used -h). Each subcommand prints its own focused help — required arguments, options, and examples — without invoking filesystem operations.

When to save

Save proactively when you discover something worth preserving across sessions:

  • Research findings that took effort to derive
  • Non-obvious patterns / gotchas in the codebase
  • Solutions to tricky problems
  • Architectural decisions and the reasoning behind them
  • In-progress work that may be resumed later

When to recall

Before starting related work or when context might exist:

  • agent-carnet find <topic> — quick scan of summaries
  • agent-carnet list <category> — browse a folder
  • agent-carnet show <path> — actually read (resets last_used; only use when the content matters)

When to call used

Call agent-carnet used <path> after a carnet actually shaped your work:

  • You applied the recorded fix and it solved the bug.
  • You consulted the carnet before retrying a hypothesis and skipped a dead-end.
  • You used the canonical name from a vocab carnet in new code instead of inventing your own.

used increments use_count — a durable importance signal that survives across sessions and lets future readers (and agent-carnet list --sort use_count) surface load-bearing notes.

Reading a carnet does NOT count. show already keeps it alive (weak signal); used records that the note was worth keeping for a real reason (strong signal).

Hard rules

  • --summary is required. Make it decisive — reading the summary in isolation tells the next reader (or the next agent) whether to read further.
  • --agent claude-code is required.
  • find does NOT bump anything. show bumps last_used. used bumps last_used AND increments use_count.
  • updated tracks content modification only (save, save --update). It is independent of last_used and is not the lifespan driver.
  • The 30-day expiry is automatic — do not manually clean up. keep: true pins permanent notes.
  • Auto-prune runs on every CLI invocation; deleted carnets land in .carnet/.trash/ for 7 days before hard delete.

Path conventions

  • <category>/<slug> — kebab-case, no leading slash, no ...
  • Categories are folders; create new ones freely as needed.
  • Subcategories are allowed: deps/esm/iconv-issue works.

When to read references/

This SKILL.md is enough for everyday note-keeping. Open the references/ files only when one of these specific cases applies — they are not always-on context, so do not load them speculatively.

Read this fileWhen
references/cookbook.mdYou are about to use (or are being asked about) a tag-based pattern such as tags: [vocab] for project terminology or tags: [hypothesis] for debugging dead-ends. The file shows the full pattern, including how to structure the body and meta: for that pattern.
references/frontmatter.mdYou need to write or read the meta: extension namespace, set a non-trivial lifespan / keep, or understand why an unfamiliar frontmatter field is or is not preserved on save.

If neither case applies, do not read references/. The base of this file already covers daily save/find/show/touch/move/rm flows.

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