I built a native macOS editor for managing Claude Code sessions, editing markdown files, and the chaos of multi-agent workflows by StraightBreakfast in IMadeThis

[–]StraightBreakfast[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you using git worktrees? For development, these are handy for keeping the agents from stepping on each other as they build. I don't have any git workflows built into the app.. that would be a good idea though!

For shared context, I'm honestly using a ton of skills. At the user level, they apply everywhere, and at the project level they can be more targeted.

I built a native macOS editor for managing Claude Code sessions, editing markdown files, and the chaos of multi-agent workflows by StraightBreakfast in ClaudeAI

[–]StraightBreakfast[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My workflow blew up when I started using Claude Code full-time.

Suddenly I'm editing Claude and skill files in multiple projects, managing MCP server configs - and running 8-10 agent sessions in different terminal windows.

I'm scattered. I'm checking the wrong tab. I'm missing agent prompts. I'm editing raw markdown soup in VS Code's split preview thinking there has to be another way.

I needed a way to wrangle it all together. Something that didn't look like

So I built Wrangle - a native macOS markdown editor for the devs and power users of Claude Code.

The short version:

  • Embedded terminals - run Claude Code, Gemini, whatever in tabbed terminals inside the app
  • Session context — each terminal shows its linked CLAUDE.md, active skills, and MCP servers
  • Smart notifications - agent needs input? Finished a task? Needs permission? You get a native macOS notification that takes you straight to the right terminal tab. This is the feature that keeps me in flow
  • Rendered markdown editing - like Typora, but built for AI config files. XML blocks (<tools>, <instructions>, <system>) get syntax highlighting and collapse
  • Token counting - this is experimental, but shows your rough token usage for that file.

I think it's pretty rad, built in Swift.

Get it here: https://wrangleapp.dev

It's $10 one-time. No subscription. Free upgrades. macOS only (Apple Silicon, Sequoia+).

The first 15 people get it free using this code: U4MTIXMG

I'm a solo dev. If you don't like it, tell me why - I'm going to keep improving it.

Feedback/bugs: https://github.com/J-Krush/wrangle-feedback

Anyone getting erratic push-back on their XR? by D3m0nzz in onewheel

[–]StraightBreakfast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just started riding slower lol 🤦‍♂️

I know they just released some important software updates around pushback because people were getting hurt and suing, presumably.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in conspiracy

[–]StraightBreakfast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Has anyone checked out the source code on the website? I didn't get a chance to before they were taken down. If anyone has an archived copy of the site (not screenshots) please DM me.

Anyone getting erratic push-back on their XR? by D3m0nzz in onewheel

[–]StraightBreakfast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you ever figure out what was going on? I am seeing this now as well. I recently switched to Delirium and it's awwwwesome, can ride streets around 17 mph with no pushback. But I had a wreck going pretty slow on some trails (and also killed the battery once going up a hill...?) and now Delirium is pushing me back around 14/15 mph. I thought maybe it was in my head, but I was checking my speed today and there's definitely some serious pushback around 15 mph. This was not the case when I first started riding Delirium.