This product was not featured by Product Hunt yet. It will not be visible on their landing page and won't be ranked (cannot win product of the day regardless of upvotes).
StructPR
Turn AI-sized diffs into fast, confident code reviews
StructPR is a GitHub App that reorganizes pull requests by business logic instead of file order. It groups changed files by context (auth, payments, migrations), briefs you on risk, flags missing changes like forgotten tests, and suggests reviewers; deterministic, ready in ~2 seconds. We also just launched Shield: free, private PR triage for open-source maintainers drowning in AI-generated PRs. Fifty pull requests, five worth reading. Free tier, no credit card.
Hey Product Hunt 👋
I'm Allan, a solo founder. I started building StructPR earlier this year, as AI-authored PRs became more and more commonplace, and it became harder to review thousands of lines of code. The way we use PRs is changing, but unfortunately GitHub still shows them as one alphabetical wall of diffs.
Reviewers quickly get overwhelmed: they scroll, skim, and approve on vibes.
StructPR regroups the diff by what it means (authentication, payments, migrations, etc.), briefs you on risk, and catches missing pieces like forgotten tests. It's deterministic and pattern-based, so results land in about 2 seconds, not after an LLM round-trip.
Alongside this we just opened Shield: free, private PR triage for open-source maintainers getting buried in machine-generated PRs. It scores incoming PRs on structural signals (not "AI detection"), keeps verdicts private to you, and never auto-closes anything. Fifty PRs come in; you focus on the five worth reading.
We have four design-partner slots open this quarter: structpr.dev/shield
Free tier for one repo, no credit card. And since we're early, the people who show up today genuinely get to shape the roadmap; tell me how your team reviews AI-era PRs, and what would make you trust an automated triage verdict.
Ran it on a messy migration PR and it actually caught the missing test I forgot to commit. The context grouping saves me from scrolling through 30 files wondering what's related.
Finally tried StructPR on a messy backend PR and the grouping by feature context saved me from scrolling through 30 files. The missing tests flag caught something I would have shipped anyway, genuinely useful.
ran it on a few old PRs and the grouping by context was way more useful than i expected, especially the flag for forgotten tests. shield for open source maintainers sounds like a lifesaver too.
How does StructPR actually figure out the business logic grouping since it only sees file paths and diffs, not the actual product context?
How does it decide what counts as "business logic" vs just file structure for projects that don't have obvious folders like auth or payments scattered across a monorepo?
Honestly the grouping by business logic is a nice touch, way more useful than skimming a flat file list. The risk brief caught a missing test on my last PR that I would have missed otherwise.
The business-logic grouping is genuinely useful, saved me from scrolling through 30 files to find what actually mattered. Shield sounds like a lifesaver for maintainers too.
Finally tried this on a gnarly migration PR and the auth vs payments grouping actually made sense for once. The missing test flag caught a real oversight I'd have shipped, which alone justifies installing it.
About StructPR on Product Hunt
“Turn AI-sized diffs into fast, confident code reviews”
StructPR was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 5 upvotes and 9 comments, placing #156 on the daily leaderboard. StructPR is a GitHub App that reorganizes pull requests by business logic instead of file order. It groups changed files by context (auth, payments, migrations), briefs you on risk, flags missing changes like forgotten tests, and suggests reviewers; deterministic, ready in ~2 seconds. We also just launched Shield: free, private PR triage for open-source maintainers drowning in AI-generated PRs. Fifty pull requests, five worth reading. Free tier, no credit card.
StructPR was featured in Software Engineering (42.7k followers), Developer Tools (515.9k followers) and GitHub (41.3k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 108.2k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted StructPR?
StructPR was hunted by Allan MacGregor. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
Want to see how StructPR stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.