--- name: review-recent-sessions description: Use when the user wants to review their recent Claude Code sessions for patterns — analyzes the last N sessions (default 5) in the current project, dispatching parallel reviewers per session, then synthesizing cross-session findings --- # Review Recent Sessions Review multiple recent sessions from the current project directory to identify cross-session patterns. ## Prerequisites - The `ed3d-extending-claude` plugin must be installed. - The `ed3d-session-reflection` plugin must be installed (provides the `conversation-reviewer` agent and `reduce-transcript.py` script). - The current session's transcript path must be available (to determine the project directory). ## Invocation The user may invoke this as: - `/review-recent-sessions` — review last 5 sessions - `/review-recent-sessions 10` — review last 10 sessions ## Steps ### 1. Find the project's session directory Use the current session's transcript path to determine the project directory. The transcript path looks like: ``` ~/.claude/projects/-Users-ed-Development-.../SESSION_ID.jsonl ``` The directory containing it is the project's session directory. If you cannot determine the project directory, ask the user. ### 2. List recent sessions Find the most recent JSONL files in the project directory, sorted by modification time, limited to the requested count (default 5). ```bash ls -t ""/*.jsonl | head - ``` Exclude the current session's transcript (the user doesn't want to review the review session itself). If fewer than 2 sessions are found, tell the user there aren't enough sessions to do a cross-session review and suggest using `/review-session` instead. ### 3. Reduce all transcripts Create a working directory: ```bash mkdir -p /tmp/session-review-batch ``` For each session, run the reduction script: ```bash python3 "${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/scripts/reduce-transcript.py" "" "/tmp/session-review-batch/reduced-.txt" ``` This can be done in a single bash command with a loop. ### 4. Dispatch parallel reviewers For each reduced transcript, dispatch a `conversation-reviewer` agent **in the background**: ed3d-session-reflection:conversation-reviewer Review session N of M opus true Review the reduced Claude Code session transcript. Transcript path: /tmp/session-review-batch/reduced-N.txt Write your findings to: /tmp/session-review-batch/findings-N.md Read the transcript, analyze it, and write your findings following your output format. Dispatch ALL reviewers in a single message to maximize parallelism. Tell the user you've dispatched N reviewers and are waiting for results. ### 5. Synthesize findings Once all reviewers complete, dispatch a general-purpose Sonnet agent to synthesize: ed3d-basic-agents:sonnet-general-purpose Synthesize session reviews You are synthesizing findings from multiple Claude Code session reviews into a cross-session analysis. Read all findings files in /tmp/session-review-batch/findings-*.md Produce a synthesis that identifies: 1. **Recurring patterns** — issues that appear across multiple sessions. These are the highest-value findings because they represent systematic problems. 2. **Progression** — is the user getting better or worse at prompting over time? Is the agent handling certain tasks better or worse? 3. **Highest-impact recommendations** — across all sessions, which recommendations would have the biggest effect? Prioritize: - CLAUDE.md changes (things the user keeps correcting) - Hooks (behaviors that should be enforced automatically) - Skills/workflows (multi-step processes that keep being done manually) 4. **Session-specific highlights** — any single-session finding that's particularly noteworthy even if it didn't recur. Write your synthesis to /tmp/session-review-batch/synthesis.md Format as Markdown. Be specific — reference which sessions showed which patterns. Be concise — this is a summary, not a repetition of individual findings. ### 6. Present synthesis Read `/tmp/session-review-batch/synthesis.md` and present the full synthesis to the user. If any individual session findings are particularly interesting, mention that the user can find per-session details in `/tmp/session-review-batch/findings-N.md`.