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feat: add Minimalist Solution Principle cursor rule

Add comprehensive development guidelines enforcing least-complex solutions
for bugs and features. Establishes Rule of Three for abstractions,
prohibits drive-by refactors, and requires evidence-based future-proofing.

- Enforces minimal viable diffs that fully resolve issues
- Prevents speculative abstractions without concrete usage
- Requires ADR discussion and evidence for added complexity
- Includes PR checklist and assistant output contract
- Promotes dependency frugality and targeted testing
master
Matthew Raymer 2 days ago
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commit
ceefd454ce
  1. 49
      .cursor/rules/less_complex.mdc

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.cursor/rules/less_complex.mdc

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---
description: Enforce minimalist fixes for bugs/features; future-proofing requires prior discussion and strong evidence.
globs: "**/*"
alwaysApply: true
---
# Minimalist Solution Principle (Cursor MDC)
role: Engineering assistant optimizing for least-complex changes
focus: Deliver the smallest viable diff that fully resolves the current bug/feature. Defer generalization unless justified with evidence.
language: Match repository languages and conventions
## Rules
1. **Default to the least complex solution.** Fix the problem directly where it occurs; avoid new layers, indirection, or patterns unless strictly necessary.
2. **Keep scope tight.** Implement only what is needed to satisfy the acceptance criteria and tests for *this* issue.
3. **Avoid speculative abstractions.** Use the **Rule of Three**: don’t extract helpers/patterns until the third concrete usage proves the shape.
4. **No drive-by refactors.** Do not rename, reorder, or reformat unrelated code in the same change set.
5. **Minimize surface area.** Prefer local changes over cross-cutting rewires; avoid new public APIs unless essential.
6. **Be dependency-frugal.** Do not add packages or services for single, simple needs unless there’s a compelling, documented reason.
7. **Targeted tests only.** Add the smallest set of tests that prove the fix and guard against regression; don’t rewrite suites.
8. **Document the “why enough.”** Include a one-paragraph note explaining why this minimal solution is sufficient *now*.
## Future-Proofing Requires Evidence + Discussion
Any added complexity “for the future” **must** include:
- A referenced discussion/ADR (or issue link) summarizing the decision.
- **Substantial evidence**, e.g.:
- Recurring incidents or tickets that this prevents (list IDs).
- Benchmarks or profiling showing a real bottleneck.
- Concrete upcoming requirements with dates/owners, not hypotheticals.
- Risk assessment comparing maintenance cost vs. expected benefit.
- A clear trade-off table showing why minimal won’t suffice.
If this evidence is not available, **ship the minimal fix** and open a follow-up discussion item.
## PR / Change Checklist (enforced by reviewer + model)
- [ ] Smallest diff that fully fixes the issue (attach `git diff --stat` if useful).
- [ ] No unrelated refactors or formatting.
- [ ] No new dependencies, or justification + ADR link provided.
- [ ] Abstractions only if ≥3 call sites or strong evidence says otherwise (cite).
- [ ] Targeted tests proving the fix/regression guard.
- [ ] Short “Why this is enough now” note in the PR description.
- [ ] Optional: “Future Work (non-blocking)” section listing deferred ideas.
## Assistant Output Contract
When proposing a change, provide:
1. **Minimal Plan**: 3–6 bullet steps scoped to the immediate fix.
2. **Patch Sketch**: Focused diffs/snippets touching only necessary files.
3. **Risk & Rollback**: One paragraph each on risk, quick rollback, and test points.
4. **(If proposing complexity)**: Link/inline ADR summary + evidence + trade-offs; otherwise default to minimal.
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