Error Resolver

Software development skill, available on Zeplik

Error Resolver is a ready-to-run software development skill on Zeplik. Systematic error diagnosis via first-principle analysis of stack traces; record and replay reusable solutions. Ask in plain language and Zeplik applies the skill's method for you inside the conversation, on whichever AI model you prefer.

The Error Resolver skill loads automatically when your request matches it, or you can invoke it directly by typing /error-resolver in any chat. It works with attachments, connectors, and any model that supports the task, so you get the same expert method every time without setting anything up.

What the Error Resolver skill can do

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How the Error Resolver skill works

<!-- source: davila7/claude-code-templates cli-tool/components/skills/development/error-resolver/SKILL.md (MIT) adapted wave-r r2 -->

Error Resolver

A first-principle approach to diagnosing and resolving errors across all languages and frameworks.

Core Philosophy

The 5-step Error Resolution Process:

1. CLASSIFY  ->  2. PARSE  ->  3. MATCH  ->  4. ANALYZE  ->  5. RESOLVE
     |              |             |             |              |
  What type?    Extract key    Known       Root cause      Fix +
               information    pattern?     analysis       Prevent

Quick Start

When you encounter an error:

  1. Paste the full error (including stack trace if available)
  2. Provide context (what were you trying to do?)
  3. Share relevant code (the file/function involved)

Error Classification Framework

Primary Categories

CategoryIndicatorsCommon Causes
SyntaxParse error, Unexpected tokenTypos, missing brackets, invalid syntax
TypeTypeError, type mismatchWrong data type, null/undefined access
ReferenceReferenceError, NameErrorUndefined variable, scope issues
RuntimeRuntimeError, ExceptionLogic errors, invalid operations
NetworkECONNREFUSED, timeout, 4xx/5xxConnection issues, wrong URL, server down
PermissionEACCES, PermissionErrorFile/directory access, sudo needed
DependencyModuleNotFound, Cannot find moduleMissing package, version mismatch
ConfigurationConfig error, env missingWrong settings, missing env vars
DatabaseConnection refused, query errorDB down, wrong credentials, bad query
MemoryOOM, heap out of memoryMemory leak, large data processing

Secondary Attributes

  • Severity: Fatal / Error / Warning / Info
  • Scope: Build-time / Runtime / Test-time
  • Origin: User code / Framework / Third-party / System

Analysis Workflow

Step 1: Classify

Identify the error category by examining:

  • Error name/code (e.g., ENOENT, TypeError)
  • Error message keywords
  • Where it occurred (compile, runtime, test)

Step 2: Parse

Extract key information:

- Error code: [specific code if any]
- File path: [where the error originated]
- Line number: [exact line if available]
- Function/method: [context of the error]
- Variable/value: [what was involved]
- Stack trace depth: [how deep is the call stack]

Step 3: Match Patterns

Check against known error patterns:

  • See patterns/ directory for language-specific patterns
  • Match error signatures to known solutions
  • Check replay history for previous solutions

Step 4: Root Cause Analysis

Apply the 5 Whys technique:

Error: Cannot read property 'name' of undefined
  Why 1? -> user object is undefined
  Why 2? -> API call returned null
  Why 3? -> User ID doesn't exist in database
  Why 4? -> ID was from stale cache
  Why 5? -> Cache invalidation not implemented

Root Cause: Missing cache invalidation logic

Step 5: Resolve

Generate actionable solution:

  1. Immediate fix - Get it working now
  2. Proper fix - The right way to solve it
  3. Prevention - How to avoid in the future

Output Format

When resolving an error, provide:

## Error Diagnosis

**Classification**: [Category] / [Severity] / [Scope]

**Error Signature**:
- Code: [error code]
- Type: [error type]
- Location: [file:line]

## Root Cause

[Explanation of why this error occurred]

**Contributing Factors**:
1. [Factor 1]
2. [Factor 2]

## Solution

### Immediate Fix
[Quick steps to resolve]

### Code Change
[Specific code to add/modify]

### Verification
[How to verify the fix works]

## Prevention

[How to prevent this error in the future]

## Replay Tag

[Unique identifier for this solution - for future reference]

Replay System

The replay system records successful solutions for future reference.

Recording a Solution

After resolving an error, record it:

# Create solution record in project
mkdir -p .claude/error-solutions

# Solution file format: [error-type]-[hash].yaml

Solution Record Format

# .claude/error-solutions/[error-signature].yaml
id: "nodejs-module-not-found-express"
created: "2024-01-15T10:30:00Z"
updated: "2024-01-20T14:22:00Z"

error:
  type: "dependency"
  category: "ModuleNotFound"
  language: "nodejs"
  pattern: "Cannot find module 'express'"
  context: "npm project, missing dependency"

diagnosis:
  root_cause: "Package not installed or node_modules corrupted"
  factors:
    - "Missing npm install after git clone"
    - "Corrupted node_modules directory"
    - "Package not in package.json"

solution:
  immediate:
    - "Run: npm install express"
  proper:
    - "Check package.json has express listed"
    - "Run: rm -rf node_modules && npm install"
  code_change: null

verification:
  - "Run the application again"
  - "Check express is in node_modules"

prevention:
  - "Add npm install to project setup docs"
  - "Use npm ci in CI/CD pipelines"

metadata:
  occurrences: 5
  last_resolved: "2024-01-20T14:22:00Z"
  success_rate: 1.0
  tags: ["nodejs", "npm", "dependency"]

Replay Lookup

When encountering an error:

  1. Generate error signature from the error message
  2. Search .claude/error-solutions/ for matching patterns
  3. If found, apply the recorded solution
  4. If new, proceed with full analysis and record the solution

Error Signature Generation

signature = hash(
  error_type +
  error_code +
  normalized_message +  # remove specific values
  language +
  framework
)

Example transformations:

  • Cannot find module 'express' -> Cannot find module '{module}'
  • TypeError: Cannot read property 'name' of undefined -> TypeError: Cannot read property '{prop}' of undefined

Debug Commands

Useful commands during debugging:

Node.js

# Verbose error output
NODE_DEBUG=* node app.js

# Memory debugging
node --inspect app.js

# Check installed packages
npm ls [package-name]

# Verify package.json
npm ls --depth=0

Python

# Debug mode
python -m pdb script.py

# Check installed packages
pip show [package-name]
pip list

General

# Check file permissions
ls -la [file]

# Check port usage
lsof -i :[port]
netstat -an | grep [port]

# Check environment variables
env | grep [VAR_NAME]
printenv [VAR_NAME]

# Check disk space
df -h

# Check memory
free -m  # Linux
vm_stat  # macOS

Common Debugging Patterns

Pattern 1: Binary Search

When the error location is unclear:

  1. Comment out half the code
  2. If error persists, it's in the remaining half
  3. Repeat until you find the exact line

Pattern 2: Minimal Reproduction

Create the smallest code that reproduces the error:

  1. Start with empty file
  2. Add code piece by piece
  3. Stop when error appears
  4. That's your minimal repro case

Pattern 3: Rubber Duck Debugging

Explain the problem out loud (or to Claude):

  1. What should happen?
  2. What actually happens?
  3. What changed recently?
  4. What assumptions am I making?

Pattern 4: Git Bisect

Find which commit introduced the bug:

git bisect start
git bisect bad  # current commit is bad
git bisect good [last-known-good-commit]
# Git will checkout commits for you to test
git bisect good/bad  # mark each as good or bad
git bisect reset  # when done

Reference Files

  • patterns/ - Language-specific error patterns

    • nodejs.md - Node.js common errors
    • python.md - Python common errors
    • react.md - React/Next.js errors
    • database.md - Database errors
    • docker.md - Docker/container errors
    • git.md - Git errors
    • network.md - Network/API errors
  • analysis/ - Analysis methodologies

    • stack-trace.md - Stack trace parsing guide
    • root-cause.md - Root cause analysis techniques
  • replay/ - Replay system

    • solution-template.yaml - Template for recording solutions

How to use the Error Resolver skill

  1. Sign in to Zeplik

    Create a free Zeplik account or sign in. New accounts start with free credits, so you can try the Error Resolver skill right away.

  2. Describe your software development task

    Ask in plain language, or type /error-resolver to invoke the skill directly. Zeplik recognizes the Error Resolver skill and applies its method.

  3. Review and refine the result

    Zeplik returns a clear, structured answer. Ask follow-ups in the same chat to refine it or take the next step.

Source and credit

Author
davila7 (D7 Class-A standalone)
License
MIT

Adapted from the open-source davila7/claude-code-templates project and tuned to run natively on Zeplik. View source on GitHub.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Error Resolver skill?
Error Resolver is a ready-to-run software development skill on Zeplik. Systematic error diagnosis via first-principle analysis of stack traces; record and replay reusable solutions. Ask in plain language and Zeplik applies the skill's method for you inside the conversation, on whichever AI model you prefer.
How do I use Error Resolver on Zeplik?
Sign in to Zeplik and ask in plain language, or type /error-resolver in any chat to invoke it directly. The skill applies its method and returns a result you can refine in the same conversation.
Which AI model does the Error Resolver skill use?
Any model you choose. Zeplik works across every model in one chat, so the Error Resolver skill runs on your preferred model for the task.
Where does the Error Resolver skill come from?
The Error Resolver skill is adapted from the open-source davila7/claude-code-templates project (MIT) and tuned to run natively on Zeplik. The original source is linked on this page.
How much does the Error Resolver skill cost?
Using the skill is free to start. You only spend Zeplik credits when the assistant runs, and new accounts begin with free credits.

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