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honey-for-devs

Honey (I Shrunk the AI) by GreenPT: a cross-tool coding skill that cuts AI coding-agent token usage and LLM API costs — write less code, less prose, and dens…

// Developer Tools[ cli ][ api ][ claude ]#claude#agents#ai#claude-code#codex#cursor#developer-tools#llm#devtoolsMIT$open-sourceupdated 14 days ago
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// install
git clone https://github.com/Green-PT/honey-for-devs

🍯 Honey (I Shrunk the AI)

Honey, I shrunk the AI

Write less code and say less about it. Honey (I Shrunk the AI) by GreenPT is a cross-tool coding skill that cuts AI coding-agent token usage and LLM API costs — making agents emit less code and less prose without losing correctness. It works with Claude Code, Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Codex, Gemini CLI, Windsurf, Cline, OpenClaw, and Kiro. Three independent levers, applied reflexively:

  1. Less code — YAGNI first. Walk a ladder (does it need to exist? → stdlib → language native → existing dependency → one line → minimum block) and stop at the first rung that works. The cheapest line is the one you never write.
  2. Less prose — drop the wind-up, the hedging, the narration of code that already speaks for itself. Answer first.
  3. Denser agent-to-agent handoffs — when the reader is another agent, not a human, hand it the most token-efficient format it parses losslessly (compact / columnar JSON, or ESO). Cuts handoff size ~in half at zero loss of recovery. Fires only here — never as a user-facing answer.

Honey combines what Ponytail (minimal code) and Caveman (terse prose) do separately, then goes further:

  • Auto-intensitylite / full / ultra chosen reflexively from the request, with no deliberation tax (it never spends reasoning tokens deciding how to comply — that would defeat the purpose on reasoning models).
  • Safety carve-outs — input validation, error handling, auth, secrets, migrations, deletes, and anything you explicitly asked for are never compressed. Lazy ≠ broken.
  • A skill family, not one prompt — an always-on core plus on-demand satellites (review, eco, gain, compress) and a hive of read-only subagents that return compressed handoffs. See Skills & subagents.

Why

Volume is cost. In agentic coding sessions, the volume of generated code and prose is what runs up the bill — and most of it is waste.

This repo ships a reproducible benchmark (bench/) so you don't have to take the numbers on faith: 23 tasks across three kinds of work — baseline vs Caveman vs Ponytail vs Honey — same model, same prompts, only the skill changes. Correctness is objective (unit tests, structural / accessibility checks, and lossless round-trip recovery for agent handoffs); quality is scored by a 4-model cross-family judge panel (median of Opus 4.8 + Sonnet 4.6

  • Haiku 4.5 + GPT-5.5) under a neutral rubric that says nothing about length, so a terse skill gets no thumb on the scale. The figures below are the committed results (Claude Opus 4.8, 3 runs each) — run cd bench && npm run bench to reproduce.

A single blended number hides the story, because the levers fire differently per task type. Quality is % of baseline (panel median; for handoffs, lossless recovery); tokens are generated output vs baseline:

Task tierCavemanPonytailHoney
Code (14 unit-tested tasks)101% · −37%99% · +24%98% · −49%
User-facing (7 landing/UI tasks)99% · −18%95% · −33%101% · −6%
Agent-to-agent (2 handoff tasks, lossless recovery)67% · −23%50% · −22%100% · −51%

Honey leads quality where it matters most — it tops the user-facing and agent-to-agent tiers (the quality-separating ones) and stays within judge noise of the pack on saturated code tasks — while cutting tokens where it's safe to:

  • Code — the deepest cut (−49% output) at essentially tied quality (98% vs 100%, within judge noise on tasks every variant passes). Caveman saves less; Ponytail's mandatory self-check inflates trivial code (+24%).
  • User-facing — the carve-out keeps Honey from compressing polish, yet it still trims output (−6%) while earning the top quality score (101% of baseline) and the only 100% accessibility pass; Ponytail strips hardest and drops to 81% on the structural/a11y checklist.
  • Agent-to-agent — under adversarial relay queries (ordinal, nested, absence, cross-field count) Honey is the only variant that stays 100% lossless while roughly halving handoff size (−51%); Caveman and Ponytail compress harder and lose recovery (67% / 50%). Its biggest, cleanest win.

The same pattern holds on GPT-5.5 (full two-provider table in bench/results/cross-provider.md): Honey is the only variant with no test regressions across all three tiers on Opus, and on both models it keeps top-tier quality while cutting tokens on every tier.

Efficient Structured Output

Honey includes ESO, a zero-dependency, schema-first format for agent handoffs. Repeated record keys are emitted once; declared row counts catch truncated messages; JSON-compatible cells preserve types.

The reproducible ESO/TOON/JSON benchmark measures bytes, two tokenizer estimates, codec speed, and lossless recovery across five agent handoff shapes. Run it with npm run bench:eso.

printf '%s' '{"from":"reviewer","findings":[{"sev":"H","issue":"expired token"}]}' | eso encode
eso decode < handoff.eso

CCR — for huge, redundant array tool output

ESO is lossless, for handoffs where every row matters. CCR (Compress-Cache-Retrieve) is the lossy-but-recoverable lever for the opposite case: a long uniform array you must read but mostly skim — logs, scan results, event streams. It keeps an informative sample (endpoints, anomalies/change-points, head/tail), caches the dropped rows locally, and leaves a <<ccr:HASH N_rows_offloaded>> sentinel. Nothing is lost — retrieve restores the original by hash on demand.

some-tool | eso crush          # → sampled view + sentinel; originals cached in .honey-ccr/
eso retrieve <hash>            # → the full original array, verbatim

Validated on a 90-row log (opus-4.8 + gpt-5.5): −82% tokens, crushed-only 96% answer accuracy, 100% with retrieve — and the lone crushed miss was a refusal, not a hallucination. Benches: npm run bench:ccr (tokens) and npm run bench:ccr:comprehension (quality). The honey-ccr skill tells the agent when to reach for it.

Pick Honey when you want the best quality-per-token, especially in Claude Code.

Skills & subagents

Honey is one always-on core plus a family of on-demand tools. The core is a writing style (it must be the default to pay off); the rest are actions you reach for at a specific moment.

NameKindWhat it does
honeycore skill (always-on)the three levers, applied reflexively to every response. /honey [lite|full|ultra|off]
honey-designsatellite skillfor user-facing UI (landing pages, components): keeps the full rendered polish, cuts tokens by writing the design densely (CSS vars, shared classes, clamp()) — same pixels, fewer tokens
honey-reviewsatellite skillreview a diff for over-engineering + over-verbosity; terse delete-list
honey-ecosatellite skillthis session's CO₂ / $ / tokens saved, from the committed EcoLogits port
honey-gainsatellite skillthe committed benchmark scoreboard (reads bench/results/ at runtime)
honey-compresssatellite skillrewrite a re-read memory file (CLAUDE.md, AGENTS.md) tersely to cut input tokens; backs up the original
honey-memorysatellite skillcreate + maintain one committed per-project PROJECT.md so agents stop re-discovering the same facts every cold session; stores only stable, not-in-the-code context, kept honest by living in git
honey-ccrsatellite skillcrush huge redundant array tool output (logs, scan results) to a sampled view; lossy-but-recoverable via eso crush/retrieve
honey-hiveguide skilldecide when to delegate to the hive vs. work inline
hive-scoutsubagent (haiku, read-only)locate symbols / callers / configs; returns a compact id-keyed JSON map
hive-reviewersubagent (haiku, read-only)review a diff/files; returns columnar id-keyed JSON findings
hive-buildersubagent (sonnet, ≤2 files)make a surgical edit under the ladder; returns a compact change-manifest

The hive is Lever 3 with a runtime: each subagent returns a compressed handoff, so the result injected back into the orchestrator's context is −44–53% smaller with zero loss (npm run bench:hive). Live, the skills hold up too — honey −86%, honey-review −70%, hive-reviewer −43% output tokens at passing correctness (npm run bench:skills). See bench/hive/RESULTS.md and bench/skills/RESULTS.md.

On user-facing work — where the core skill spends tokens because polish is the spec — honey-design keeps the same rendered polish for −19% output tokens vs no skill (judge 92 vs 90), beating the core skill on both axes across 7 landing-page/UI tasks. See bench/results/honey-design.md.

Honesty note. Earlier versions of this README quoted 92% / 78% / 73% quality and −57% / −65% / −70% tokens from an unpublished run. Those don't reproduce — the real quality spread is far narrower and the token savings are tier-dependent (and Ponytail adds tokens on simple code). The table above is what the committed bench/ harness actually produces; see bench/results/combined.md for the full breakdown.

Install

Claude Code (plugin marketplace)

/plugin marketplace add Green-PT/honey-for-devs
/plugin install honey@greenpt

Then /honey to turn it on (/honey lite|full|ultra to set intensity, /honey off to stop). A 🍯 badge shows the active mode in your statusline.

One-line installer (interactive wizard)

In a terminal it asks which agents you use, whether to wire the CO₂ badge, drop per-repo rule files, and your default mode — then sets up exactly that. The wizard prompts on /dev/tty, so it works through curl | bash. CI/pipes and --yes fall back to auto-detect.

macOS / Linux / WSL / Git Bash:

curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Green-PT/honey-for-devs/main/install.sh | bash

Windows (PowerShell 5.1+):

irm https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Green-PT/honey-for-devs/main/install.ps1 | iex

Windows (irm | iex) runs non-interactive; clone and run node bin/install.js for the wizard. Add bash -s -- --yes to skip prompts. Requires Node.js on your PATH. Safe to re-run; skips tools you don't have.

Every supported platform

PlatformInstall
Claude Code/plugin marketplace add Green-PT/honey-for-devs then /plugin install honey@greenpt
Codexcodex plugin marketplace add Green-PT/honey-for-devs then enable via /plugins
GitHub Copilot CLIcopilot plugin marketplace add Green-PT/honey-for-devs then copilot plugin install honey@greenpt
Gemini CLIgemini extensions install https://github.com/Green-PT/honey-for-devs
OpenClawclawhub install honey (companions: clawhub install honey-review, …)
Cursorcopy .cursor/rules/honey.mdc into your project
Windsurfcopy .windsurf/rules/honey.md into your project
Clinecopy .clinerules/honey.md into your project
GitHub Copilot (editor)copy .github/copilot-instructions.md into your project
Kirocopy .kiro/steering/honey.md (project or ~/.kiro/steering/)
OpenCodecopy .opencode/AGENTS.md into your project
Aider / Zed / any AGENTS.md readercopy AGENTS.md into your project

All of these are also handled automatically by the one-line installer. See INSTALL.md for manual steps, flags, and uninstall.

Carbon badge (Claude Code)

When Honey is active, the statusline also shows a live CO₂ estimate for the session and the CO₂/$ saved vs a no-Honey baseline:

🍯 honey:full · 🌿 44g CO₂ (saved ~26g · $0.18)

(Illustrative — a ~2k-output-token Opus session.) The estimate is a faithful port of EcoLogits v0.8.2 (verified to match the package exactly). Model params come from EcoLogits' own registry (hooks/eco-models.json, exported by scripts/build-eco-models.py) — matched by exact id, falling back to a per-family alias for frontier models too new for the registry. Grid switches per provider — Anthropic on AWS Trainium (~500 gCO₂/kWh), OpenAI on Azure (~400), Google on GCP (~330). Aliases, grids, and per-mode savings live in hooks/eco-config.json.

The badge itself renders only in Claude Code (it reads Claude Code's transcript, where every model is a Claude model). The provider switching matters for scripts/eco_report.py, which runs against any transcript — Codex/Gemini CLIs would each need their own statusline hook to show a live badge there.

Params are speculative — Anthropic discloses none. EcoLogits' raw coefficient is a single-stream (batch-size-1) upper bound — it gives one request the whole GPU set for the full generation (for Opus, ~1.9 tok/s, ~30× slower than reality), which alone is ~1.4 kg per 1M output tokens. Production serves many requests concurrently, so the badge divides that ceiling by an effective batch concurrency (serving_concurrency, default 32 — calibrated so modeled throughput matches real ~50–70 tok/s serving) to show realistic served impact. eco_report.py prints both the served figure and the single-stream ceiling. Treat these as a range, not a meter reading.

For the full breakdown (usage + embodied + primary energy) run the real package:

pip install ecologits
python scripts/eco_report.py        # newest session, or --transcript PATH

How it stays in sync

The skill is authored once in skills/honey/SKILL.md. Every per-platform rule file (and AGENTS.md) is generated from it:

node scripts/build-rules.js          # regenerate all rule files
node scripts/build-rules.js --check  # CI: fail if any copy drifted

The OpenClaw skill package (.openclaw/skills/) is generated the same way from skills/; rerun node scripts/build-openclaw-skills.js after changing a skill. tests/openclaw-skills.test.js fails if a committed copy is stale.

License

MIT — see LICENSE.

The carbon-estimation data and coefficients in hooks/eco-models.json and hooks/eco.js are derived from EcoLogits and remain under the MPL-2.0. See NOTICE for details.

// compatibility

Platformscli, api
Operating systems
AI compatibilityclaude
LicenseMIT
Pricingopen-source
LanguageJavaScript

// faq

What is honey-for-devs?

Honey (I Shrunk the AI) by GreenPT: a cross-tool coding skill that cuts AI coding-agent token usage and LLM API costs — write less code, less prose, and denser agent-to-agent handoffs (−53%, lossless in benchmarks) with no loss of quality. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Codex, Gemini CLI, Windsurf, Cline & Kiro.. It is open-source on GitHub.

Is honey-for-devs free to use?

honey-for-devs is open-source under the MIT license, so it is free to use.

What category does honey-for-devs belong to?

honey-for-devs is listed under devtools in the Claudeers registry of Claude-compatible tools.

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