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Clief Notes

23.6k members • Free

6 contributions to Clief Notes
ICM Folder Structure
Been experimenting heavily with folder structure in Claude (CLAUDE.md, memory files, plans, core docs) and it's been a game-changer for keeping context organized. But the more I dig in, the more questions pile up: 1. Hooks folder— how do you actually use it? What goes where, and how do all the hook files tie together? 2. 500-line instruction limit— I know each markdown file should stay under 500 lines, but how do you handle genuinely complex workflows without either bloating the file or losing output quality? Has anyone found a pattern that keeps things lean but maintains (or improves) efficiency? Would love to hear what's worked for people and any lessons learned along the way.
ICM folder structure help..
I have modified and followed the ICM strategy to imporve my folder structure with proper Context.md and other markdown file.. while this setup works well for Claude Code.. but i am facing issues when usung it with Github Copilot or Antigravity.. like they dont follow the instructions alot of times.. do not follow the files indexed.. etc.. i have added proper Agents.md/gemini.md/copilot-instructions.md but still the same problem Anyone else facing this problem? Please do tell me if there's a way which worked for you! Thanks
1 like • 20d
@Santi Rodri i have been experimenting the same.. one thing that i have noticed with copilot especially is.. the structure can remain the same.. but the starting instruction/entry point file contents need to be different.. and still with that it might be a chance it will not store the memory-plan properly.. but apart from that it REALLY works faster.. and consumes less tokens for the same set of tasks.. Tested this on a very complex repository and it works!
1 like • 20d
@Shirsho Guha Thanks for this.. it made it better
🛠️ I Built Something for You. Here's Where This Community Is Going.
I just recorded a walkthrough of this but I want to lay it out here too. I've been building an instructor kit. A full folder architecture (yes, the same method I teach) designed to help people in this community create real courses. Not loose tutorials. Not "here's a tip" posts. Structured, formatted courses that fit into what we're building here and actually teach someone something useful. The kit has my writing rules, my lesson templates, a course outline system, sample lessons, and a prompt you can hand to Claude or any AI to help you write content that matches the community format. You can use it with Claude Code and a full folder setup, or you can just copy and paste a single file into any AI chat and start building. Both paths work. 🎯 Why I'm doing this. This community has grown fast. 12,500+ members. The courses I've built so far cover the foundation: folder architecture, the abstraction series, Claude Code, prompting frameworks. But I'm one person. There are people in this community who know things I don't. Who have built things I haven't. Who could teach topics I can't cover with the depth they deserve. The way I see it, Clief Notes should operate more like a university than a course platform. Sections and departments, each run by someone who actually has depth in that subject. Your course, your name on it, your expertise. I provide the structure, the audience, the format, and the quality control. You bring the knowledge. 💰 What's in it for you right now. I want to be straight about this. Early on, the main thing I can offer instructors is free VIP access for as long as your course is live and maintained. That gets you into every tier of the community, the live sessions, the recordings, the Discord, everything. As this grows and I can see what kind of attention and value the instructor courses bring in, I want to move toward profit sharing or payouts for instructors whose courses are driving real engagement. I'm still working out exactly how that looks. I'd rather figure it out with real data than promise something I can't deliver yet. What I can promise is that this will not stay volunteer-only forever. The goal is for this to be worth your time in every sense.
2 likes • 21d
Amazing initiative!!
Welcome to Clief Notes. Here's where to start.
1. Watch the intro video and introduce yourself in the intro post here 2. Start with The Foundation (free course). Concepts, folder architecture, prompting framework. Everything else builds on this. 3. Check in at the bottom of each lesson. Polls, discussion posts, other members working through the same stuff. Use them. 4. When you're ready to build real things, move to Implementation Playbooks (Level 2). When you're ready to build your own tools, Building Your Stack (Level 3). 5. Post your work. Ask questions. Help others when you can. What are you here to build?
Poll
3645 members have voted
1 like • 25d
I have been following your content for a while! and its super helpful! Thanks a ton!
1 like • 23d
How do i go to level 2?🥲😭
Claude limits workaround
Hey I'm working in Antigravity and using Claude Code and hitting my limits daily. How do you handle hitting the limit? Do you have a workaround to deal with it? Certain tasks handled by other LLM? Complete switch after the limit is hit? What LLM do you switch to? I'm a bit nervous to use another LLM... afraid of the quality of the work it will do. A lot of questions in one post. 🤯 Please share your thoughts.
1 like • 24d
I have been working with claude code using glm-5 and kimi-k2.5 models running on Nvidia nim. The results are pretty decent. the only issue is of a bit of latency but thats fine (if you run it as a background tasks for non-high priority items). You can also try use Ollama cloud. But again managing the tokens/chat messages would give you best results!
1-6 of 6
Kanishk Sharma
2
1point to level up
@kanishk-sharma-6709
nice person

Active 10d ago
Joined Mar 21, 2026
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