Hi HN — I'm Scott. Skillscript is a small language I built to write what I want my local agent to actually do, in a form I can read and version, instead of hoping the model gets it right each time.
The itch started with something small. I wanted my NanoClaw agent to run my morning brief the same way every day. Check overnight tickets, summarize the deploy pipeline, flag anything urgent. Every session, it would re-figure out how to do this from scratch, drift a little, and cost tokens for what's basically a fixed procedure. I could put it in a system prompt or an MD skill file, but those are still instructions the model reads and reasons about every time. And I wanted it to run autonomously and then hand it to the model to reason over the data.
The second thing that pushed me: I wanted to use small local models for the cheap stuff. They're capable, but if you just hand them the wheel, they wander. What I wanted was a way for the frontier model (or me) to write a specific procedure and hand it to the local model to execute, not interpret. The skillscript is the program; the model is the runtime.
Skillscript is that. A skillscript is a text file with named steps, variables, conditions, and calls out to tools (MCP connectors, a local model, and shell commands from an operator allowlist). It's deliberately minimal — no eval, no arbitrary imports, no subprocess, no unbounded loops. Bounded language, limited potential for damage. Everything a skillscript can do is in the file. You read it and know.
Where it is: pre-1.0 (0.30), MCP-native, self-hosted. Rough edges I know about: first-run setup takes more steps than it should, some of the grammar is still moving, and the local model integration currently assumes Ollama. It works well enough that I use it every day, but I wouldn't necessarily call it production-ready.
- Repo: [https://github.com/sshwarts/skillscript](https://github.com/sshwarts/skillscript)
- Site: [https://skillscript.ai](https://skillscript.ai)
- Docs: [https://skillscript.mintlify.app/docs](https://skillscript.mintlify.app/docs)
- npm: `skillscript-runtime`
I'd welcome critique on two things especially: the language design (is it too small? too big? wrong shape?) and the trust model around agent-authored skills. What would you want to see before you trusted this on your own machine?
>Turing completeness becomes a liability. An agent-authored script can do anything including things the agent didn't realize were dangerous. subprocess.run, arbitrary network calls, file writes. None of these are gated. The blast radius of a buggy agent-authored script is the whole host.
This always turns out to be a terribe idea. And it couldn't be a worse appoach for LLMs. Hamstringing them isn't going to help. And inventing a new language means now you have to include the entire language definition in every prompt, blowing away your context window with mansplaining your invented language over and over and over again to an LLM who knows Python deeper than any human being ever will. If it had eyes to roll, it would be so exasperated its extraocular muscles would be exquisitely tender from acute bilateral myalgia.
PHP was a templating language, and for all its flaws none of its weakness had to do with being bad at templating. But then people got it in their heads that they wanted to separate programmers from designers, and hire designers so dumb they could not be trusted with foreach loops, so it takes twice the amount of people to do anything plus all the coordination overhead, so they invented intentionally hamstrung templating languages like Smarty embedded within a poorly designed programming language like PHP that was still ok for templating, ending up with a terrible hacky poorly defined incoherent templating language that was useless to programmers. And then the designers needed variables, macros, conditionals, loops, functions, and they hacked back in half assed even worse designed programming language features. Greenspun's Tenth Rule on steroids struck like a swarm of locusts sent by God to smite the sinners.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenspun%27s_tenth_rule
>Any sufficiently complicated C or Fortran program contains an ad hoc, informally-specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation of half of Common Lisp.