Back to Skills

Remember

Explicitly save important knowledge to auto-memory with timestamp and context. Use when a discovery is too important to rely on auto-capture.

$ npx promptcreek add remember

Auto-detects your installed agents and installs the skill to each one.

What This Skill Does

The remember skill saves explicit knowledge to Claude's auto-memory. This ensures Claude doesn't forget important details. It's helpful for developers who want to explicitly record project conventions, debugging insights, or architecture decisions.

When to Use

  • Record a hard-won debugging insight.
  • Document a project convention.
  • Note a tool-specific gotcha.
  • Preserve an architecture decision.
  • Teach Claude a personal preference.

Key Features

Writes explicit entries to auto-memory.
Checks for duplicate entries.
Suggests updating existing entries.
Warns when memory is nearing capacity.
Suggests promoting knowledge to a rule.

Installation

Run in your project directory:
$ npx promptcreek add remember

Auto-detects your installed agents (Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, etc.) and installs the skill to each one.

View Full Skill Content

/si:remember — Save Knowledge Explicitly

Writes an explicit entry to auto-memory when something is important enough that you don't want to rely on Claude noticing it automatically.

Usage

/si:remember <what to remember>

/si:remember "This project's CI requires Node 20 LTS — v22 breaks the build"

/si:remember "The /api/auth endpoint uses a custom JWT library, not passport"

/si:remember "Reza prefers explicit error handling over try-catch-all patterns"

When to Use

| Situation | Example |

|-----------|---------|

| Hard-won debugging insight | "CORS errors on /api/upload are caused by the CDN, not the backend" |

| Project convention not in CLAUDE.md | "We use barrel exports in src/components/" |

| Tool-specific gotcha | "Jest needs --forceExit flag or it hangs on DB tests" |

| Architecture decision | "We chose Drizzle over Prisma for type-safe SQL" |

| Preference you want Claude to learn | "Don't add comments explaining obvious code" |

Workflow

Step 1: Parse the knowledge

Extract from the user's input:

  • What: The concrete fact or pattern
  • Why it matters: Context (if provided)
  • Scope: Project-specific or global?

Step 2: Check for duplicates

MEMORY_DIR="$HOME/.claude/projects/$(pwd | sed 's|/|%2F|g; s|%2F|/|; s|^/||')/memory"

grep -ni "<keywords>" "$MEMORY_DIR/MEMORY.md" 2>/dev/null

If a similar entry exists:

  • Show it to the user
  • Ask: "Update the existing entry or add a new one?"

Step 3: Write to MEMORY.md

Append to the end of MEMORY.md:

- {{concise fact or pattern}}

Keep entries concise — one line when possible. Auto-memory entries don't need timestamps, IDs, or metadata. They're notes, not database records.

If MEMORY.md is over 180 lines, warn the user:

⚠️ MEMORY.md is at {{n}}/200 lines. Consider running /si:review to free space.

Step 4: Suggest promotion

If the knowledge sounds like a rule (imperative, always/never, convention):

💡 This sounds like it could be a CLAUDE.md rule rather than a memory entry.

Rules are enforced with higher priority. Want to /si:promote it instead?

Step 5: Confirm

✅ Saved to auto-memory

"{{entry}}"

MEMORY.md: {{n}}/200 lines

Claude will see this at the start of every session in this project.

What NOT to use /si:remember for

  • Temporary context: Use session memory or just tell Claude in conversation
  • Enforced rules: Use /si:promote to write directly to CLAUDE.md
  • Cross-project knowledge: Use ~/.claude/CLAUDE.md for global rules
  • Sensitive data: Never store credentials, tokens, or secrets in memory files

Tips

  • Be concise — one line beats a paragraph
  • Include the concrete command or value, not just the concept

- ✅ "Build with pnpm build, tests with pnpm test:e2e"

- ❌ "The project uses pnpm for building and testing"

  • If you're remembering the same thing twice, promote it to CLAUDE.md
0Installs
0Views

Supported Agents

Claude CodeCursorCodexGemini CLIAiderWindsurfOpenClaw

Details

License
MIT
Source
seeded
Published
3/17/2026

Related Skills