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lum1104/understand-anything1.2k installs

understand-chat

Use when you need to ask questions about a codebase or understand code using a knowledge graph

How do I install this agent skill?

npx skills add https://github.com/lum1104/understand-anything --skill understand-chat
view source ↗

Is this agent skill safe to install?

  • Gen Agent Trust Hubpass

    The skill is designed for codebase analysis and is generally safe, though it possesses a minor surface for indirect prompt injection. It processes code summaries from a local JSON file that could contain instructions from untrusted sources.

  • Socketpass

    No alerts

  • Snykpass

    Risk: LOW · No issues

  • Runlayerpass

    1 file scanned · No issues

  • ZeroLeakspass

    Score: 93/100 · 2 sections analyzed

What does this agent skill do?

/understand-chat

Answer questions about this codebase using the knowledge graph in the project's data directory (.ua/knowledge-graph.json, or the legacy .understand-anything/knowledge-graph.json when that directory is present).

Graph Structure Reference

The knowledge graph JSON has this structure:

  • project — {name, description, languages, frameworks, analyzedAt, gitCommitHash}
  • nodes[] — each has {id, type, name, filePath?, summary, tags[], complexity, languageNotes?}
    • Code node types: file, function, class, module, concept
    • Non-code node types: config, document, service, table, endpoint, pipeline, schema, resource
    • Domain/knowledge node types: domain, flow, step, article, entity, topic, claim, source
    • IDs use the node type as prefix, e.g. file:path, function:path:name, config:path, article:path
  • edges[] — each has {source, target, type, direction, weight}
    • Key types: imports, contains, calls, depends_on, configures, documents, deploys, triggers, contains_flow, flow_step, related, cites
  • layers[] — each has {id, name, description, nodeIds[]}
  • tour[] — each has {order, title, description, nodeIds[]}

How to Read Efficiently

  1. Use Grep to search within the JSON for relevant entries BEFORE reading the full file
  2. Only read sections you need — don't dump the entire graph into context
  3. Node names and summaries are the most useful fields for understanding
  4. Edges tell you how components connect — follow imports and calls for dependency chains

Instructions

  1. Resolve the data directory $UA_DIR. Run UA_DIR=$([ -d .understand-anything ] && echo .understand-anything || echo .ua) — this is the legacy .understand-anything/ when it already exists, otherwise the new .ua/. Check that $UA_DIR/knowledge-graph.json exists in the current project root. If not, tell the user to run /understand first.

  2. Read project metadata only — use Grep or Read with a line limit to extract just the "project" section from the top of the file for context (name, description, languages, frameworks).

  3. Search for relevant nodes — use Grep to search the knowledge graph file for the user's query keywords: "$ARGUMENTS"

    • Search "name" fields: grep -i "query_keyword" in the graph file
    • Search "summary" fields for semantic matches
    • Search "tags" arrays for topic matches
    • Note the id values of all matching nodes
  4. Find connected edges — for each matched node ID, Grep for that ID in the edges section to find:

    • What it imports or depends on (downstream)
    • What calls or imports it (upstream)
    • This gives you the 1-hop subgraph around the query
  5. Read layer context — Grep for "layers" to understand which architectural layers the matched nodes belong to.

  6. Answer the query using only the relevant subgraph:

    • Reference specific files, functions, and relationships from the graph
    • Explain which layer(s) are relevant and why
    • Be concise but thorough — link concepts to actual code locations
    • If the query doesn't match any nodes, say so and suggest related terms from the graph

Add the canonical catalog link to the repository README so users can inspect current installs and available audits. The publishing guide covers the complete discovery path.

<a href="https://skillzs.dev/skills/lum1104/understand-anything/understand-chat">View understand-chat on skillZs</a>