introducing t-rex
with t-rex enabled, greptile doesn't just review your PR, it runs your branch in a sandbox to find bugs.
it mocks api calls, clicks around the UI, and writes + runs unit tests
in our benchmarks, it caught ~20% more bugs than base greptile. most of the new bugs caught could not have been caught with more inference, they required code execution.
t-rex is available in beta to all greptile users
introducing the greptile CLI.
a full greptile review for your local changes, right in your terminal.
1. npm i -g greptile
2. checkout your branch
3. greptile review 🦎
launching 5 things:
1. multi-repo context support
2. rebuilt web app for super large orgs
3. integrations with claude/codex/devin
4. .greptile/rules files
5. rebuilt learning so greptile maintains internal docs about your company
more than a quarter of all code reviewed by greptile is now written by "background agents" - completely autonomous e2e coding agents like devin.
we analyzed millions of PRs written by background agents and compared their
- code churn rates
- revert rates
- bugs per PR
against human baseline.
read the full post on our blog!
As a reader of an essay, I’m required to read every word of it. Previously, the writer was also bound by the same requirement. This imbalance has made me more cynical as a reader (and overly cautious as a writer)
@greptile just got a brand refresh done entirely in-house.
we pulled inspiration from moments in the past that once felt futuristic, from the terminal to video games, 80s malls, neon genesis, and of course reptiles, their repeating scales, and their colorful environments.
the result is a diverse color palette, intricate illustrations, and modular geometric forms that feel complex yet precise and ethereal.
🧵the process and thinking below: