CodeX — Your Codex Coding Partner
Delegate coding execution to Codex CLI. CodeX turns clear plans into working code.
Critical rules
- ONLY interact with CodeX through the bundled shell script. NEVER call
codexCLI directly. - Run the script ONCE per task. If it succeeds (exit code 0), read the output file and proceed. Do NOT re-run or retry.
- Do NOT read or inspect the script source code. Treat it as a black box.
- ALWAYS quote file paths containing brackets, spaces, or special characters when passing to the script (e.g.
--file "src/app/[locale]/page.tsx"). Unquoted[...]triggers zsh glob expansion. - Keep the task prompt focused. Aim for under ~500 words. Describe WHAT to do and key constraints, not step-by-step HOW. CodeX is an autonomous agent with full workspace access — it reads files, explores code, and figures out implementation details on its own.
- Never paste file contents into the prompt. Use
--fileto point CodeX to key files — it reads them directly. Duplicating file contents in the prompt wastes tokens and adds no value. - Don't reference or describe the SKILL.md itself in the prompt. CodeX doesn't need to know about this skill's configuration.
How to call the script
The script path is:
~/.claude/skills/codex/scripts/ask_codex.sh
Minimal invocation:
~/.claude/skills/codex/scripts/ask_codex.sh "Your request in natural language"
With file context:
~/.claude/skills/codex/scripts/ask_codex.sh "Refactor these components to use the new API" \
--file src/components/UserList.tsx \
--file src/components/UserDetail.tsx
Multi-turn conversation (continue a previous session):
~/.claude/skills/codex/scripts/ask_codex.sh "Also add retry logic with exponential backoff" \
--session <session_id from previous run>
The script prints on success:
session_id=<thread_id>
output_path=<path to markdown file>
Read the file at output_path to get CodeX's response. Save session_id if you plan follow-up calls.
Decision policy
Call CodeX when at least one of these is true:
- The implementation plan is clear and needs coding execution.
- The task involves batch refactoring, code generation, or repetitive changes.
- Multiple files need coordinated modifications following a defined pattern.
- You want a practitioner's perspective on whether a plan is feasible.
- The task is cost-sensitive and doesn't require deep architectural reasoning.
- Writing or updating tests based on existing code.
- Simple-to-moderate bug fixes where the root cause is identified.
Workflow
- Design the solution and identify the key files involved.
- Run the script with a clear, concise task description. Tell CodeX the goal and constraints, not step-by-step implementation details — it figures those out itself. For discussion, use a question-oriented task with
--read-only. - Pass relevant files with
--file(2-6 high-signal entry points; CodeX has full workspace access and will discover related files on its own). - Read the output — CodeX executes changes and reports what it did.
- Review the changes in your workspace.
For multi-step projects, use --session <id> to continue with full conversation history. For independent parallel tasks, use the Task tool with run_in_background: true.
Options
--workspace <path>— Target workspace directory (defaults to current directory).--file <path>— Point CodeX to key entry-point files (repeatable, workspace-relative or absolute). Don't duplicate their contents in the prompt.--session <id>— Resume a previous session for multi-turn conversation.--model <name>— Override model (default: uses Codex config).--reasoning <level>— Reasoning effort:low,medium,high(default:medium). Usehighfor code review, debugging, complex refactoring, or root cause analysis.--sandbox <mode>— Override sandbox policy (default: workspace-write via full-auto).--read-only— Read-only mode for pure discussion/analysis, no file changes.