cc-viewer 1.3.4 → 1.3.6

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
Files changed (420) hide show
  1. package/concepts/ar/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  2. package/concepts/ar/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  3. package/concepts/ar/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  4. package/concepts/ar/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  5. package/concepts/ar/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  6. package/concepts/ar/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  7. package/concepts/ar/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  8. package/concepts/ar/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  9. package/concepts/ar/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  10. package/concepts/ar/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  11. package/concepts/ar/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  12. package/concepts/ar/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  13. package/concepts/ar/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  14. package/concepts/ar/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  15. package/concepts/ar/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  16. package/concepts/ar/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  17. package/concepts/ar/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  18. package/concepts/ar/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  19. package/concepts/ar/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  20. package/concepts/ar/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  21. package/concepts/ar/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  22. package/concepts/ar/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  23. package/concepts/ar/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  24. package/concepts/da/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  25. package/concepts/da/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  26. package/concepts/da/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  27. package/concepts/da/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  28. package/concepts/da/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  29. package/concepts/da/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  30. package/concepts/da/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  31. package/concepts/da/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  32. package/concepts/da/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  33. package/concepts/da/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  34. package/concepts/da/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  35. package/concepts/da/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  36. package/concepts/da/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  37. package/concepts/da/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  38. package/concepts/da/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  39. package/concepts/da/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  40. package/concepts/da/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  41. package/concepts/da/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  42. package/concepts/da/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  43. package/concepts/da/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  44. package/concepts/da/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  45. package/concepts/da/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  46. package/concepts/da/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  47. package/concepts/de/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  48. package/concepts/de/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  49. package/concepts/de/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  50. package/concepts/de/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  51. package/concepts/de/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  52. package/concepts/de/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  53. package/concepts/de/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  54. package/concepts/de/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  55. package/concepts/de/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  56. package/concepts/de/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  57. package/concepts/de/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  58. package/concepts/de/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  59. package/concepts/de/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  60. package/concepts/de/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  61. package/concepts/de/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  62. package/concepts/de/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  63. package/concepts/de/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  64. package/concepts/de/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  65. package/concepts/de/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  66. package/concepts/de/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  67. package/concepts/de/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  68. package/concepts/de/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  69. package/concepts/de/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  70. package/concepts/en/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  71. package/concepts/en/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  72. package/concepts/en/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  73. package/concepts/en/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  74. package/concepts/en/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  75. package/concepts/en/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  76. package/concepts/en/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  77. package/concepts/en/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  78. package/concepts/en/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  79. package/concepts/en/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  80. package/concepts/en/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  81. package/concepts/en/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  82. package/concepts/en/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  83. package/concepts/en/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  84. package/concepts/en/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  85. package/concepts/en/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  86. package/concepts/en/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  87. package/concepts/en/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  88. package/concepts/en/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  89. package/concepts/en/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  90. package/concepts/en/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  91. package/concepts/en/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  92. package/concepts/en/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  93. package/concepts/es/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  94. package/concepts/es/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  95. package/concepts/es/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  96. package/concepts/es/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  97. package/concepts/es/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  98. package/concepts/es/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  99. package/concepts/es/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  100. package/concepts/es/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  101. package/concepts/es/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  102. package/concepts/es/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  103. package/concepts/es/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  104. package/concepts/es/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  105. package/concepts/es/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  106. package/concepts/es/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  107. package/concepts/es/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  108. package/concepts/es/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  109. package/concepts/es/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  110. package/concepts/es/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  111. package/concepts/es/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  112. package/concepts/es/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  113. package/concepts/es/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  114. package/concepts/es/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  115. package/concepts/es/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  116. package/concepts/fr/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  117. package/concepts/fr/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  118. package/concepts/fr/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  119. package/concepts/fr/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  120. package/concepts/fr/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  121. package/concepts/fr/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  122. package/concepts/fr/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  123. package/concepts/fr/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  124. package/concepts/fr/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  125. package/concepts/fr/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  126. package/concepts/fr/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  127. package/concepts/fr/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  128. package/concepts/fr/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  129. package/concepts/fr/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  130. package/concepts/fr/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  131. package/concepts/fr/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  132. package/concepts/fr/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  133. package/concepts/fr/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  134. package/concepts/fr/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  135. package/concepts/fr/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  136. package/concepts/fr/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  137. package/concepts/fr/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  138. package/concepts/fr/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  139. package/concepts/it/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  140. package/concepts/it/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  141. package/concepts/it/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  142. package/concepts/it/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  143. package/concepts/it/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  144. package/concepts/it/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  145. package/concepts/it/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  146. package/concepts/it/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  147. package/concepts/it/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  148. package/concepts/it/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  149. package/concepts/it/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  150. package/concepts/it/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  151. package/concepts/it/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  152. package/concepts/it/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  153. package/concepts/it/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  154. package/concepts/it/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  155. package/concepts/it/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  156. package/concepts/it/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  157. package/concepts/it/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  158. package/concepts/it/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  159. package/concepts/it/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  160. package/concepts/it/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  161. package/concepts/it/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  162. package/concepts/ja/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  163. package/concepts/ja/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  164. package/concepts/ja/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  165. package/concepts/ja/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  166. package/concepts/ja/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  167. package/concepts/ja/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  168. package/concepts/ja/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  169. package/concepts/ja/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  170. package/concepts/ja/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  171. package/concepts/ja/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  172. package/concepts/ja/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  173. package/concepts/ja/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  174. package/concepts/ja/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  175. package/concepts/ja/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  176. package/concepts/ja/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  177. package/concepts/ja/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  178. package/concepts/ja/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  179. package/concepts/ja/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  180. package/concepts/ja/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  181. package/concepts/ja/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  182. package/concepts/ja/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  183. package/concepts/ja/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  184. package/concepts/ja/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  185. package/concepts/ko/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  186. package/concepts/ko/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  187. package/concepts/ko/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  188. package/concepts/ko/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  189. package/concepts/ko/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  190. package/concepts/ko/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  191. package/concepts/ko/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  192. package/concepts/ko/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  193. package/concepts/ko/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  194. package/concepts/ko/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  195. package/concepts/ko/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  196. package/concepts/ko/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  197. package/concepts/ko/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  198. package/concepts/ko/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  199. package/concepts/ko/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  200. package/concepts/ko/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  201. package/concepts/ko/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  202. package/concepts/ko/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  203. package/concepts/ko/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  204. package/concepts/ko/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  205. package/concepts/ko/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  206. package/concepts/ko/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  207. package/concepts/ko/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  208. package/concepts/no/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  209. package/concepts/no/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  210. package/concepts/no/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  211. package/concepts/no/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  212. package/concepts/no/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  213. package/concepts/no/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  214. package/concepts/no/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  215. package/concepts/no/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  216. package/concepts/no/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  217. package/concepts/no/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  218. package/concepts/no/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  219. package/concepts/no/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  220. package/concepts/no/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  221. package/concepts/no/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  222. package/concepts/no/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  223. package/concepts/no/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  224. package/concepts/no/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  225. package/concepts/no/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  226. package/concepts/no/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  227. package/concepts/no/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  228. package/concepts/no/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  229. package/concepts/no/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  230. package/concepts/no/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  231. package/concepts/pl/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  232. package/concepts/pl/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  233. package/concepts/pl/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  234. package/concepts/pl/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  235. package/concepts/pl/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  236. package/concepts/pl/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  237. package/concepts/pl/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  238. package/concepts/pl/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  239. package/concepts/pl/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  240. package/concepts/pl/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  241. package/concepts/pl/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  242. package/concepts/pl/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  243. package/concepts/pl/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  244. package/concepts/pl/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  245. package/concepts/pl/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  246. package/concepts/pl/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  247. package/concepts/pl/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  248. package/concepts/pl/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  249. package/concepts/pl/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  250. package/concepts/pl/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  251. package/concepts/pl/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  252. package/concepts/pl/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  253. package/concepts/pl/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  254. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  255. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  256. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  257. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  258. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  259. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  260. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  261. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  262. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  263. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  264. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  265. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  266. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  267. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  268. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  269. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  270. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  271. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  272. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  273. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  274. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  275. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  276. package/concepts/pt-BR/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  277. package/concepts/ru/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  278. package/concepts/ru/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  279. package/concepts/ru/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  280. package/concepts/ru/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  281. package/concepts/ru/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  282. package/concepts/ru/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  283. package/concepts/ru/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  284. package/concepts/ru/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  285. package/concepts/ru/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  286. package/concepts/ru/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  287. package/concepts/ru/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  288. package/concepts/ru/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  289. package/concepts/ru/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  290. package/concepts/ru/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  291. package/concepts/ru/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  292. package/concepts/ru/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  293. package/concepts/ru/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  294. package/concepts/ru/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  295. package/concepts/ru/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  296. package/concepts/ru/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  297. package/concepts/ru/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  298. package/concepts/ru/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  299. package/concepts/ru/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  300. package/concepts/th/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  301. package/concepts/th/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  302. package/concepts/th/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  303. package/concepts/th/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  304. package/concepts/th/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  305. package/concepts/th/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  306. package/concepts/th/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  307. package/concepts/th/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  308. package/concepts/th/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  309. package/concepts/th/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  310. package/concepts/th/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  311. package/concepts/th/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  312. package/concepts/th/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  313. package/concepts/th/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  314. package/concepts/th/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  315. package/concepts/th/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  316. package/concepts/th/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  317. package/concepts/th/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  318. package/concepts/th/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  319. package/concepts/th/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  320. package/concepts/th/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  321. package/concepts/th/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  322. package/concepts/th/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  323. package/concepts/tr/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  324. package/concepts/tr/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  325. package/concepts/tr/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  326. package/concepts/tr/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  327. package/concepts/tr/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  328. package/concepts/tr/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  329. package/concepts/tr/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  330. package/concepts/tr/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  331. package/concepts/tr/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  332. package/concepts/tr/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  333. package/concepts/tr/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  334. package/concepts/tr/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  335. package/concepts/tr/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  336. package/concepts/tr/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  337. package/concepts/tr/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  338. package/concepts/tr/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  339. package/concepts/tr/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  340. package/concepts/tr/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  341. package/concepts/tr/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  342. package/concepts/tr/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  343. package/concepts/tr/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  344. package/concepts/tr/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  345. package/concepts/tr/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  346. package/concepts/uk/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  347. package/concepts/uk/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  348. package/concepts/uk/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  349. package/concepts/uk/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  350. package/concepts/uk/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  351. package/concepts/uk/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  352. package/concepts/uk/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  353. package/concepts/uk/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  354. package/concepts/uk/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  355. package/concepts/uk/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  356. package/concepts/uk/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  357. package/concepts/uk/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  358. package/concepts/uk/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  359. package/concepts/uk/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  360. package/concepts/uk/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  361. package/concepts/uk/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  362. package/concepts/uk/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  363. package/concepts/uk/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  364. package/concepts/uk/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  365. package/concepts/uk/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  366. package/concepts/uk/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  367. package/concepts/uk/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  368. package/concepts/uk/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  369. package/concepts/zh/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  370. package/concepts/zh/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  371. package/concepts/zh/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  372. package/concepts/zh/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  373. package/concepts/zh/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  374. package/concepts/zh/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  375. package/concepts/zh/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  376. package/concepts/zh/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  377. package/concepts/zh/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  378. package/concepts/zh/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  379. package/concepts/zh/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  380. package/concepts/zh/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  381. package/concepts/zh/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  382. package/concepts/zh/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  383. package/concepts/zh/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  384. package/concepts/zh/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  385. package/concepts/zh/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  386. package/concepts/zh/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  387. package/concepts/zh/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  388. package/concepts/zh/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  389. package/concepts/zh/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  390. package/concepts/zh/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  391. package/concepts/zh/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  392. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-Agent.md +75 -0
  393. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-AskUserQuestion.md +25 -0
  394. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-Bash.md +125 -0
  395. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-Edit.md +12 -0
  396. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-EnterPlanMode.md +89 -0
  397. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-EnterWorktree.md +60 -0
  398. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-ExitPlanMode.md +27 -0
  399. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-Glob.md +9 -0
  400. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-Grep.md +14 -0
  401. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-NotebookEdit.md +4 -0
  402. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-Read.md +19 -0
  403. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-Skill.md +25 -0
  404. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-TaskCreate.md +44 -0
  405. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-TaskGet.md +25 -0
  406. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-TaskList.md +24 -0
  407. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-TaskOutput.md +10 -0
  408. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-TaskStop.md +9 -0
  409. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-TaskUpdate.md +78 -0
  410. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-WebFetch.md +23 -0
  411. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-WebSearch.md +30 -0
  412. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-Write.md +11 -0
  413. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-executeCode.md +12 -0
  414. package/concepts/zh-TW/Tool-getDiagnostics.md +4 -0
  415. package/dist/assets/index-BF9IACDI.css +1 -0
  416. package/dist/assets/{index-DMkp2pkL.js → index-CyQGlRiR.js} +108 -108
  417. package/dist/index.html +2 -2
  418. package/package.json +1 -1
  419. package/server.js +1 -24
  420. package/dist/assets/index-Dsn6K9v-.css +0 -1
@@ -33,3 +33,28 @@ Executes a skill within the main conversation. Skills are specialized capabiliti
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  ## Significance in cc-viewer
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  Skill calls appear in request logs as `tool_use` content blocks. The prompt expanded from the skill affects the system prompt or message content of subsequent requests.
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+
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+ ## Original Text
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+
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+ <textarea readonly>Execute a skill within the main conversation
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+
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+ When users ask you to perform tasks, check if any of the available skills match. Skills provide specialized capabilities and domain knowledge.
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+
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+ When users reference a "slash command" or "/<something>" (e.g., "/commit", "/review-pr"), they are referring to a skill. Use this tool to invoke it.
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+
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+ How to invoke:
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+ - Use this tool with the skill name and optional arguments
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+ - Examples:
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+ - `skill: "pdf"` - invoke the pdf skill
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+ - `skill: "commit", args: "-m 'Fix bug'"` - invoke with arguments
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+ - `skill: "review-pr", args: "123"` - invoke with arguments
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+ - `skill: "ms-office-suite:pdf"` - invoke using fully qualified name
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+
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+ Important:
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+ - Available skills are listed in system-reminder messages in the conversation
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+ - When a skill matches the user's request, this is a BLOCKING REQUIREMENT: invoke the relevant Skill tool BEFORE generating any other response about the task
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+ - NEVER mention a skill without actually calling this tool
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+ - Do not invoke a skill that is already running
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+ - Do not use this tool for built-in CLI commands (like /help, /clear, etc.)
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+ - If you see a <command-name> tag in the current conversation turn, the skill has ALREADY been loaded - follow the instructions directly instead of calling this tool again
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+ </textarea>
@@ -36,3 +36,47 @@ Creates a structured task list entry for tracking progress, organizing complex t
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  ## Significance in cc-viewer
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  TaskCreate is an internal task management operation in Claude Code and does not produce independent API requests. However, the model's tool_use block for calling this tool can be seen in Chat Mode.
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+
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+ ## Original Text
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+
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+ <textarea readonly>Use this tool to create a structured task list for your current coding session. This helps you track progress, organize complex tasks, and demonstrate thoroughness to the user.
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+ It also helps the user understand the progress of the task and overall progress of their requests.
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+
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+ ## When to Use This Tool
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+
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+ Use this tool proactively in these scenarios:
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+
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+ - Complex multi-step tasks - When a task requires 3 or more distinct steps or actions
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+ - Non-trivial and complex tasks - Tasks that require careful planning or multiple operations
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+ - Plan mode - When using plan mode, create a task list to track the work
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+ - User explicitly requests todo list - When the user directly asks you to use the todo list
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+ - User provides multiple tasks - When users provide a list of things to be done (numbered or comma-separated)
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+ - After receiving new instructions - Immediately capture user requirements as tasks
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+ - When you start working on a task - Mark it as in_progress BEFORE beginning work
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+ - After completing a task - Mark it as completed and add any new follow-up tasks discovered during implementation
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+
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+ ## When NOT to Use This Tool
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+
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+ Skip using this tool when:
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+ - There is only a single, straightforward task
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+ - The task is trivial and tracking it provides no organizational benefit
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+ - The task can be completed in less than 3 trivial steps
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+ - The task is purely conversational or informational
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+
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+ NOTE that you should not use this tool if there is only one trivial task to do. In this case you are better off just doing the task directly.
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+
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+ ## Task Fields
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+
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+ - **subject**: A brief, actionable title in imperative form (e.g., "Fix authentication bug in login flow")
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+ - **description**: Detailed description of what needs to be done, including context and acceptance criteria
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+ - **activeForm**: Present continuous form shown in spinner when task is in_progress (e.g., "Fixing authentication bug"). This is displayed to the user while you work on the task.
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+
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+ **IMPORTANT**: Always provide activeForm when creating tasks. The subject should be imperative ("Run tests") while activeForm should be present continuous ("Running tests"). All tasks are created with status `pending`.
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+
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+ ## Tips
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+
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+ - Create tasks with clear, specific subjects that describe the outcome
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+ - Include enough detail in the description for another agent to understand and complete the task
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+ - After creating tasks, use TaskUpdate to set up dependencies (blocks/blockedBy) if needed
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+ - Check TaskList first to avoid creating duplicate tasks
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+ </textarea>
@@ -33,3 +33,28 @@ Retrieves the full details of a task by its task ID.
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  ## Significance in cc-viewer
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  TaskGet is an internal task management operation and does not produce independent API requests.
36
+
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+ ## Original Text
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+
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+ <textarea readonly>Use this tool to retrieve a task by its ID from the task list.
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+
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+ ## When to Use This Tool
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+
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+ - When you need the full description and context before starting work on a task
44
+ - To understand task dependencies (what it blocks, what blocks it)
45
+ - After being assigned a task, to get complete requirements
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+
47
+ ## Output
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+
49
+ Returns full task details:
50
+ - **subject**: Task title
51
+ - **description**: Detailed requirements and context
52
+ - **status**: 'pending', 'in_progress', or 'completed'
53
+ - **blocks**: Tasks waiting on this one to complete
54
+ - **blockedBy**: Tasks that must complete before this one can start
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+
56
+ ## Tips
57
+
58
+ - After fetching a task, verify its blockedBy list is empty before beginning work.
59
+ - Use TaskList to see all tasks in summary form.
60
+ </textarea>
@@ -34,3 +34,27 @@ Summary information for each task:
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  ## Significance in cc-viewer
35
35
 
36
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  TaskList is an internal task management operation and does not produce independent API requests.
37
+
38
+ ## Original Text
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+
40
+ <textarea readonly>Use this tool to list all tasks in the task list.
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+
42
+ ## When to Use This Tool
43
+
44
+ - To see what tasks are available to work on (status: 'pending', no owner, not blocked)
45
+ - To check overall progress on the project
46
+ - To find tasks that are blocked and need dependencies resolved
47
+ - After completing a task, to check for newly unblocked work or claim the next available task
48
+ - **Prefer working on tasks in ID order** (lowest ID first) when multiple tasks are available, as earlier tasks often set up context for later ones
49
+
50
+ ## Output
51
+
52
+ Returns a summary of each task:
53
+ - **id**: Task identifier (use with TaskGet, TaskUpdate)
54
+ - **subject**: Brief description of the task
55
+ - **status**: 'pending', 'in_progress', or 'completed'
56
+ - **owner**: Agent ID if assigned, empty if available
57
+ - **blockedBy**: List of open task IDs that must be resolved first (tasks with blockedBy cannot be claimed until dependencies resolve)
58
+
59
+ Use TaskGet with a specific task ID to view full details including description and comments.
60
+ </textarea>
@@ -32,3 +32,13 @@ Gets the output of a running or completed background task. Applicable to backgro
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  ## Significance in cc-viewer
33
33
 
34
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  TaskOutput calls do not produce API requests themselves; they are internal task management operations in Claude Code and do not appear in request logs.
35
+
36
+ ## Original Text
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+
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+ <textarea readonly>- Retrieves output from a running or completed task (background shell, agent, or remote session)
39
+ - Takes a task_id parameter identifying the task
40
+ - Returns the task output along with status information
41
+ - Use block=true (default) to wait for task completion
42
+ - Use block=false for non-blocking check of current status
43
+ - Task IDs can be found using the /tasks command
44
+ - Works with all task types: background shells, async agents, and remote sessions</textarea>
@@ -25,3 +25,12 @@ Stops a running background task.
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  ## Significance in cc-viewer
26
26
 
27
27
  TaskStop calls do not produce API requests themselves; they are internal task management operations in Claude Code.
28
+
29
+ ## Original Text
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+
31
+ <textarea readonly>
32
+ - Stops a running background task by its ID
33
+ - Takes a task_id parameter identifying the task to stop
34
+ - Returns a success or failure status
35
+ - Use this tool when you need to terminate a long-running task
36
+ </textarea>
@@ -47,3 +47,81 @@ pending → in_progress → completed
47
47
  ## Significance in cc-viewer
48
48
 
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  TaskUpdate is an internal task management operation and does not produce independent API requests.
50
+
51
+ ## Original Text
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+
53
+ <textarea readonly>Use this tool to update a task in the task list.
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+
55
+ ## When to Use This Tool
56
+
57
+ **Mark tasks as resolved:**
58
+ - When you have completed the work described in a task
59
+ - When a task is no longer needed or has been superseded
60
+ - IMPORTANT: Always mark your assigned tasks as resolved when you finish them
61
+ - After resolving, call TaskList to find your next task
62
+
63
+ - ONLY mark a task as completed when you have FULLY accomplished it
64
+ - If you encounter errors, blockers, or cannot finish, keep the task as in_progress
65
+ - When blocked, create a new task describing what needs to be resolved
66
+ - Never mark a task as completed if:
67
+ - Tests are failing
68
+ - Implementation is partial
69
+ - You encountered unresolved errors
70
+ - You couldn't find necessary files or dependencies
71
+
72
+ **Delete tasks:**
73
+ - When a task is no longer relevant or was created in error
74
+ - Setting status to `deleted` permanently removes the task
75
+
76
+ **Update task details:**
77
+ - When requirements change or become clearer
78
+ - When establishing dependencies between tasks
79
+
80
+ ## Fields You Can Update
81
+
82
+ - **status**: The task status (see Status Workflow below)
83
+ - **subject**: Change the task title (imperative form, e.g., "Run tests")
84
+ - **description**: Change the task description
85
+ - **activeForm**: Present continuous form shown in spinner when in_progress (e.g., "Running tests")
86
+ - **owner**: Change the task owner (agent name)
87
+ - **metadata**: Merge metadata keys into the task (set a key to null to delete it)
88
+ - **addBlocks**: Mark tasks that cannot start until this one completes
89
+ - **addBlockedBy**: Mark tasks that must complete before this one can start
90
+
91
+ ## Status Workflow
92
+
93
+ Status progresses: `pending` → `in_progress` → `completed`
94
+
95
+ Use `deleted` to permanently remove a task.
96
+
97
+ ## Staleness
98
+
99
+ Make sure to read a task's latest state using `TaskGet` before updating it.
100
+
101
+ ## Examples
102
+
103
+ Mark task as in progress when starting work:
104
+ ```json
105
+ {"taskId": "1", "status": "in_progress"}
106
+ ```
107
+
108
+ Mark task as completed after finishing work:
109
+ ```json
110
+ {"taskId": "1", "status": "completed"}
111
+ ```
112
+
113
+ Delete a task:
114
+ ```json
115
+ {"taskId": "1", "status": "deleted"}
116
+ ```
117
+
118
+ Claim a task by setting owner:
119
+ ```json
120
+ {"taskId": "1", "owner": "my-name"}
121
+ ```
122
+
123
+ Set up task dependencies:
124
+ ```json
125
+ {"taskId": "2", "addBlockedBy": ["1"]}
126
+ ```
127
+ </textarea>
@@ -34,3 +34,26 @@ Fetches web page content from a specified URL, converts HTML to markdown, and pr
34
34
  ## Significance in cc-viewer
35
35
 
36
36
  WebFetch calls appear in request logs as `tool_use` / `tool_result` content block pairs. The `tool_result` contains the AI-processed web content summary.
37
+
38
+ ## Original Text
39
+
40
+ <textarea readonly>IMPORTANT: WebFetch WILL FAIL for authenticated or private URLs. Before using this tool, check if the URL points to an authenticated service (e.g. Google Docs, Confluence, Jira, GitHub). If so, you MUST use ToolSearch first to find a specialized tool that provides authenticated access.
41
+
42
+ - Fetches content from a specified URL and processes it using an AI model
43
+ - Takes a URL and a prompt as input
44
+ - Fetches the URL content, converts HTML to markdown
45
+ - Processes the content with the prompt using a small, fast model
46
+ - Returns the model's response about the content
47
+ - Use this tool when you need to retrieve and analyze web content
48
+
49
+ Usage notes:
50
+ - IMPORTANT: If an MCP-provided web fetch tool is available, prefer using that tool instead of this one, as it may have fewer restrictions.
51
+ - The URL must be a fully-formed valid URL
52
+ - HTTP URLs will be automatically upgraded to HTTPS
53
+ - The prompt should describe what information you want to extract from the page
54
+ - This tool is read-only and does not modify any files
55
+ - Results may be summarized if the content is very large
56
+ - Includes a self-cleaning 15-minute cache for faster responses when repeatedly accessing the same URL
57
+ - When a URL redirects to a different host, the tool will inform you and provide the redirect URL in a special format. You should then make a new WebFetch request with the redirect URL to fetch the content.
58
+ - For GitHub URLs, prefer using the gh CLI via Bash instead (e.g., gh pr view, gh issue view, gh api).
59
+ </textarea>
@@ -30,3 +30,33 @@ Performs search engine queries and returns search results for obtaining up-to-da
30
30
  ## Significance in cc-viewer
31
31
 
32
32
  WebSearch calls appear in request logs as `tool_use` / `tool_result` content block pairs. The `tool_result` contains the search results list.
33
+
34
+ ## Original Text
35
+
36
+ <textarea readonly>
37
+ - Allows Claude to search the web and use the results to inform responses
38
+ - Provides up-to-date information for current events and recent data
39
+ - Returns search result information formatted as search result blocks, including links as markdown hyperlinks
40
+ - Use this tool for accessing information beyond Claude's knowledge cutoff
41
+ - Searches are performed automatically within a single API call
42
+
43
+ CRITICAL REQUIREMENT - You MUST follow this:
44
+ - After answering the user's question, you MUST include a "Sources:" section at the end of your response
45
+ - In the Sources section, list all relevant URLs from the search results as markdown hyperlinks: [Title](URL)
46
+ - This is MANDATORY - never skip including sources in your response
47
+ - Example format:
48
+
49
+ [Your answer here]
50
+
51
+ Sources:
52
+ - [Source Title 1](https://example.com/1)
53
+ - [Source Title 2](https://example.com/2)
54
+
55
+ Usage notes:
56
+ - Domain filtering is supported to include or block specific websites
57
+ - Web search is only available in the US
58
+
59
+ IMPORTANT - Use the correct year in search queries:
60
+ - The current month is March 2026. You MUST use this year when searching for recent information, documentation, or current events.
61
+ - Example: If the user asks for "latest React docs", search for "React documentation" with the current year, NOT last year
62
+ </textarea>
@@ -30,3 +30,14 @@ Writes content to the local filesystem. Overwrites the file if it already exists
30
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  ## Significance in cc-viewer
31
31
 
32
32
  Write calls appear in request logs as `tool_use` content blocks, with `input.content` containing the complete written content.
33
+
34
+ ## Original Text
35
+
36
+ <textarea readonly>Writes a file to the local filesystem.
37
+
38
+ Usage:
39
+ - This tool will overwrite the existing file if there is one at the provided path.
40
+ - If this is an existing file, you MUST use the Read tool first to read the file's contents. This tool will fail if you did not read the file first.
41
+ - Prefer the Edit tool for modifying existing files — it only sends the diff. Only use this tool to create new files or for complete rewrites.
42
+ - NEVER create documentation files (*.md) or README files unless explicitly requested by the User.
43
+ - Only use emojis if the user explicitly requests it. Avoid writing emojis to files unless asked.</textarea>
@@ -31,3 +31,15 @@ Executes Python code in the Jupyter kernel of the current notebook file.
31
31
  ## Significance in cc-viewer
32
32
 
33
33
  executeCode is an MCP tool that appears in the `tools` array of request logs under the name `mcp__ide__executeCode`. Its invocations and returns follow the standard `tool_use` / `tool_result` pattern. Adding or removing MCP tools causes changes to the tools array, which may trigger cache rebuilds.
34
+
35
+ ## Original Text
36
+
37
+ <textarea readonly>Execute python code in the Jupyter kernel for the current notebook file.
38
+
39
+ All code will be executed in the current Jupyter kernel.
40
+
41
+ Avoid declaring variables or modifying the state of the kernel unless the user
42
+ explicitly asks for it.
43
+
44
+ Any code executed will persist across calls to this tool, unless the kernel
45
+ has been restarted.</textarea>
@@ -30,3 +30,7 @@ Gets language diagnostics from VS Code, including syntax errors, type errors, li
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30
  ## Significance in cc-viewer
31
31
 
32
32
  getDiagnostics is an MCP tool that appears in the `tools` array of request logs under the name `mcp__ide__getDiagnostics`. Its invocations and returns follow the standard `tool_use` / `tool_result` pattern. Adding or removing MCP tools causes changes to the tools array, which may trigger cache rebuilds.
33
+
34
+ ## Original Text
35
+
36
+ <textarea readonly>Get language diagnostics from VS Code</textarea>
@@ -53,3 +53,78 @@ Inicia un sub-agent (SubAgent) para manejar de forma autónoma tareas complejas
53
53
  ## Significado en cc-viewer
54
54
 
55
55
  Agent es el nuevo nombre de la herramienta Task en las versiones recientes de Claude Code. Las llamadas a Agent producen cadenas de solicitudes SubAgent, visibles en la lista de solicitudes como secuencias de sub-solicitudes independientes del MainAgent. Las solicitudes SubAgent generalmente tienen un system prompt simplificado y menos definiciones de herramientas, formando un contraste claro con el MainAgent. En cc-viewer, pueden aparecer los nombres de herramienta `Task` o `Agent` según la versión de Claude Code utilizada en la conversación grabada.
56
+
57
+ ## Texto original
58
+
59
+ <textarea readonly>Launch a new agent to handle complex, multi-step tasks autonomously.
60
+
61
+ The Agent tool launches specialized agents (subprocesses) that autonomously handle complex tasks. Each agent type has specific capabilities and tools available to it.
62
+
63
+ Available agent types and the tools they have access to:
64
+ - general-purpose: General-purpose agent for researching complex questions, searching for code, and executing multi-step tasks. When you are searching for a keyword or file and are not confident that you will find the right match in the first few tries use this agent to perform the search for you. (Tools: *)
65
+ - statusline-setup: Use this agent to configure the user's Claude Code status line setting. (Tools: Read, Edit)
66
+ - Explore: Fast agent specialized for exploring codebases. Use this when you need to quickly find files by patterns (eg. "src/components/**/*.tsx"), search code for keywords (eg. "API endpoints"), or answer questions about the codebase (eg. "how do API endpoints work?"). When calling this agent, specify the desired thoroughness level: "quick" for basic searches, "medium" for moderate exploration, or "very thorough" for comprehensive analysis across multiple locations and naming conventions. (Tools: All tools except Agent, ExitPlanMode, Edit, Write, NotebookEdit)
67
+ - Plan: Software architect agent for designing implementation plans. Use this when you need to plan the implementation strategy for a task. Returns step-by-step plans, identifies critical files, and considers architectural trade-offs. (Tools: All tools except Agent, ExitPlanMode, Edit, Write, NotebookEdit)
68
+ - claude-code-guide: Use this agent when the user asks questions ("Can Claude...", "Does Claude...", "How do I...") about: (1) Claude Code (the CLI tool) - features, hooks, slash commands, MCP servers, settings, IDE integrations, keyboard shortcuts; (2) Claude Agent SDK - building custom agents; (3) Claude API (formerly Anthropic API) - API usage, tool use, Anthropic SDK usage. **IMPORTANT:** Before spawning a new agent, check if there is already a running or recently completed claude-code-guide agent that you can resume using the "resume" parameter. (Tools: Glob, Grep, Read, WebFetch, WebSearch)
69
+
70
+ When using the Agent tool, you must specify a subagent_type parameter to select which agent type to use.
71
+
72
+ When NOT to use the Agent tool:
73
+ - If you want to read a specific file path, use the Read or Glob tool instead of the Agent tool, to find the match more quickly
74
+ - If you are searching for a specific class definition like "class Foo", use the Glob tool instead, to find the match more quickly
75
+ - If you are searching for code within a specific file or set of 2-3 files, use the Read tool instead of the Agent tool, to find the match more quickly
76
+ - Other tasks that are not related to the agent descriptions above
77
+
78
+
79
+ Usage notes:
80
+ - Always include a short description (3-5 words) summarizing what the agent will do
81
+ - Launch multiple agents concurrently whenever possible, to maximize performance; to do that, use a single message with multiple tool uses
82
+ - When the agent is done, it will return a single message back to you. The result returned by the agent is not visible to the user. To show the user the result, you should send a text message back to the user with a concise summary of the result.
83
+ - You can optionally run agents in the background using the run_in_background parameter. When an agent runs in the background, you will be automatically notified when it completes — do NOT sleep, poll, or proactively check on its progress. Continue with other work or respond to the user instead.
84
+ - **Foreground vs background**: Use foreground (default) when you need the agent's results before you can proceed — e.g., research agents whose findings inform your next steps. Use background when you have genuinely independent work to do in parallel.
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+ - Agents can be resumed using the `resume` parameter by passing the agent ID from a previous invocation. When resumed, the agent continues with its full previous context preserved. When NOT resuming, each invocation starts fresh and you should provide a detailed task description with all necessary context.
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+ - When the agent is done, it will return a single message back to you along with its agent ID. You can use this ID to resume the agent later if needed for follow-up work.
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+ - Provide clear, detailed prompts so the agent can work autonomously and return exactly the information you need.
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+ - Agents with "access to current context" can see the full conversation history before the tool call. When using these agents, you can write concise prompts that reference earlier context (e.g., "investigate the error discussed above") instead of repeating information. The agent will receive all prior messages and understand the context.
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+ - The agent's outputs should generally be trusted
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+ - Clearly tell the agent whether you expect it to write code or just to do research (search, file reads, web fetches, etc.), since it is not aware of the user's intent
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+ - If the agent description mentions that it should be used proactively, then you should try your best to use it without the user having to ask for it first. Use your judgement.
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+ - If the user specifies that they want you to run agents "in parallel", you MUST send a single message with multiple Agent tool use content blocks. For example, if you need to launch both a build-validator agent and a test-runner agent in parallel, send a single message with both tool calls.
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+ - You can optionally set `isolation: "worktree"` to run the agent in a temporary git worktree, giving it an isolated copy of the repository. The worktree is automatically cleaned up if the agent makes no changes; if changes are made, the worktree path and branch are returned in the result.
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+
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+ Example usage:
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+
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+ <example_agent_descriptions>
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+ "test-runner": use this agent after you are done writing code to run tests
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+ "greeting-responder": use this agent to respond to user greetings with a friendly joke
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+ </example_agent_descriptions>
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+
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+ <example>
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+ user: "Please write a function that checks if a number is prime"
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+ assistant: Sure let me write a function that checks if a number is prime
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+ assistant: First let me use the Write tool to write a function that checks if a number is prime
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+ assistant: I'm going to use the Write tool to write the following code:
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+ <code>
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+ function isPrime(n) {
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+ if (n <= 1) return false
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+ for (let i = 2; i * i <= n; i++) {
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+ if (n % i === 0) return false
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+ }
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+ return true
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+ }
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+ </code>
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+ <commentary>
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+ Since a significant piece of code was written and the task was completed, now use the test-runner agent to run the tests
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+ </commentary>
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+ assistant: Now let me use the test-runner agent to run the tests
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+ assistant: Uses the Agent tool to launch the test-runner agent
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+ </example>
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+
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+ <example>
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+ user: "Hello"
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+ <commentary>
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+ Since the user is greeting, use the greeting-responder agent to respond with a friendly joke
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+ </commentary>
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+ assistant: "I'm going to use the Agent tool to launch the greeting-responder agent"
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+ </example>
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+ </textarea>
@@ -52,3 +52,28 @@ Cada objeto `option`:
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  ## Significado en cc-viewer
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  Las llamadas a AskUserQuestion aparecen en el registro de solicitudes como content blocks `tool_use`, conteniendo las definiciones de preguntas y opciones. Las respuestas del usuario aparecen en el historial de mensajes de solicitudes posteriores.
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+
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+ ## Texto original
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+
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+ <textarea readonly>Use this tool when you need to ask the user questions during execution. This allows you to:
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+ 1. Gather user preferences or requirements
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+ 2. Clarify ambiguous instructions
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+ 3. Get decisions on implementation choices as you work
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+ 4. Offer choices to the user about what direction to take.
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+
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+ Usage notes:
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+ - Users will always be able to select "Other" to provide custom text input
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+ - Use multiSelect: true to allow multiple answers to be selected for a question
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+ - If you recommend a specific option, make that the first option in the list and add "(Recommended)" at the end of the label
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+
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+ Plan mode note: In plan mode, use this tool to clarify requirements or choose between approaches BEFORE finalizing your plan. Do NOT use this tool to ask "Is my plan ready?" or "Should I proceed?" - use ExitPlanMode for plan approval. IMPORTANT: Do not reference "the plan" in your questions (e.g., "Do you have feedback about the plan?", "Does the plan look good?") because the user cannot see the plan in the UI until you call ExitPlanMode. If you need plan approval, use ExitPlanMode instead.
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+
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+ Preview feature:
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+ Use the optional `markdown` field on options when presenting concrete artifacts that users need to visually compare:
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+ - ASCII mockups of UI layouts or components
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+ - Code snippets showing different implementations
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+ - Diagram variations
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+ - Configuration examples
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+
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+ When any option has a markdown, the UI switches to a side-by-side layout with a vertical option list on the left and preview on the right. Do not use previews for simple preference questions where labels and descriptions suffice. Note: previews are only supported for single-select questions (not multiSelect).
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+ </textarea>
@@ -45,3 +45,128 @@ Ejecuta comandos shell con configuración de tiempo de espera opcional. El direc
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  ## Significado en cc-viewer
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46
 
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  Las llamadas a Bash aparecen en el registro de solicitudes como pares de content blocks `tool_use` (conteniendo el comando) y `tool_result` (conteniendo la salida). La salida de la ejecución del comando puede usarse para analizar el comportamiento operativo del modelo.
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+
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+ ## Texto original
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+
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+ <textarea readonly>Executes a given bash command and returns its output.
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+
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+ The working directory persists between commands, but shell state does not. The shell environment is initialized from the user's profile (bash or zsh).
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+
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+ IMPORTANT: Avoid using this tool to run `find`, `grep`, `cat`, `head`, `tail`, `sed`, `awk`, or `echo` commands, unless explicitly instructed or after you have verified that a dedicated tool cannot accomplish your task. Instead, use the appropriate dedicated tool as this will provide a much better experience for the user:
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+
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+ - File search: Use Glob (NOT find or ls)
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+ - Content search: Use Grep (NOT grep or rg)
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+ - Read files: Use Read (NOT cat/head/tail)
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+ - Edit files: Use Edit (NOT sed/awk)
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+ - Write files: Use Write (NOT echo >/cat <<EOF)
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+ - Communication: Output text directly (NOT echo/printf)
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+ While the Bash tool can do similar things, it’s better to use the built-in tools as they provide a better user experience and make it easier to review tool calls and give permission.
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+
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+ # Instructions
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+ - If your command will create new directories or files, first use this tool to run `ls` to verify the parent directory exists and is the correct location.
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+ - Always quote file paths that contain spaces with double quotes in your command (e.g., cd "path with spaces/file.txt")
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+ - Try to maintain your current working directory throughout the session by using absolute paths and avoiding usage of `cd`. You may use `cd` if the User explicitly requests it.
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+ - You may specify an optional timeout in milliseconds (up to 600000ms / 10 minutes). By default, your command will timeout after 120000ms (2 minutes).
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+ - You can use the `run_in_background` parameter to run the command in the background. Only use this if you don't need the result immediately and are OK being notified when the command completes later. You do not need to check the output right away - you'll be notified when it finishes. You do not need to use '&' at the end of the command when using this parameter.
71
+ - Write a clear, concise description of what your command does. For simple commands, keep it brief (5-10 words). For complex commands (piped commands, obscure flags, or anything hard to understand at a glance), include enough context so that the user can understand what your command will do.
72
+ - When issuing multiple commands:
73
+ - If the commands are independent and can run in parallel, make multiple Bash tool calls in a single message. Example: if you need to run "git status" and "git diff", send a single message with two Bash tool calls in parallel.
74
+ - If the commands depend on each other and must run sequentially, use a single Bash call with '&&' to chain them together.
75
+ - Use ';' only when you need to run commands sequentially but don't care if earlier commands fail.
76
+ - DO NOT use newlines to separate commands (newlines are ok in quoted strings).
77
+ - For git commands:
78
+ - Prefer to create a new commit rather than amending an existing commit.
79
+ - Before running destructive operations (e.g., git reset --hard, git push --force, git checkout --), consider whether there is a safer alternative that achieves the same goal. Only use destructive operations when they are truly the best approach.
80
+ - Never skip hooks (--no-verify) or bypass signing (--no-gpg-sign, -c commit.gpgsign=false) unless the user has explicitly asked for it. If a hook fails, investigate and fix the underlying issue.
81
+ - Avoid unnecessary `sleep` commands:
82
+ - Do not sleep between commands that can run immediately — just run them.
83
+ - If your command is long running and you would like to be notified when it finishes – simply run your command using `run_in_background`. There is no need to sleep in this case.
84
+ - Do not retry failing commands in a sleep loop — diagnose the root cause or consider an alternative approach.
85
+ - If waiting for a background task you started with `run_in_background`, you will be notified when it completes — do not poll.
86
+ - If you must poll an external process, use a check command (e.g. `gh run view`) rather than sleeping first.
87
+ - If you must sleep, keep the duration short (1-5 seconds) to avoid blocking the user.
88
+
89
+
90
+ # Committing changes with git
91
+
92
+ Only create commits when requested by the user. If unclear, ask first. When the user asks you to create a new git commit, follow these steps carefully:
93
+
94
+ Git Safety Protocol:
95
+ - NEVER update the git config
96
+ - NEVER run destructive git commands (push --force, reset --hard, checkout ., restore ., clean -f, branch -D) unless the user explicitly requests these actions. Taking unauthorized destructive actions is unhelpful and can result in lost work, so it's best to ONLY run these commands when given direct instructions
97
+ - NEVER skip hooks (--no-verify, --no-gpg-sign, etc) unless the user explicitly requests it
98
+ - NEVER run force push to main/master, warn the user if they request it
99
+ - CRITICAL: Always create NEW commits rather than amending, unless the user explicitly requests a git amend. When a pre-commit hook fails, the commit did NOT happen — so --amend would modify the PREVIOUS commit, which may result in destroying work or losing previous changes. Instead, after hook failure, fix the issue, re-stage, and create a NEW commit
100
+ - When staging files, prefer adding specific files by name rather than using "git add -A" or "git add .", which can accidentally include sensitive files (.env, credentials) or large binaries
101
+ - NEVER commit changes unless the user explicitly asks you to. It is VERY IMPORTANT to only commit when explicitly asked, otherwise the user will feel that you are being too proactive
102
+
103
+ 1. You can call multiple tools in a single response. When multiple independent pieces of information are requested and all commands are likely to succeed, run multiple tool calls in parallel for optimal performance. run the following bash commands in parallel, each using the Bash tool:
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+ - Run a git status command to see all untracked files. IMPORTANT: Never use the -uall flag as it can cause memory issues on large repos.
105
+ - Run a git diff command to see both staged and unstaged changes that will be committed.
106
+ - Run a git log command to see recent commit messages, so that you can follow this repository's commit message style.
107
+ 2. Analyze all staged changes (both previously staged and newly added) and draft a commit message:
108
+ - Summarize the nature of the changes (eg. new feature, enhancement to an existing feature, bug fix, refactoring, test, docs, etc.). Ensure the message accurately reflects the changes and their purpose (i.e. "add" means a wholly new feature, "update" means an enhancement to an existing feature, "fix" means a bug fix, etc.).
109
+ - Do not commit files that likely contain secrets (.env, credentials.json, etc). Warn the user if they specifically request to commit those files
110
+ - Draft a concise (1-2 sentences) commit message that focuses on the "why" rather than the "what"
111
+ - Ensure it accurately reflects the changes and their purpose
112
+ 3. You can call multiple tools in a single response. When multiple independent pieces of information are requested and all commands are likely to succeed, run multiple tool calls in parallel for optimal performance. run the following commands:
113
+ - Add relevant untracked files to the staging area.
114
+ - Create the commit with a message ending with:
115
+ Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
116
+ - Run git status after the commit completes to verify success.
117
+ Note: git status depends on the commit completing, so run it sequentially after the commit.
118
+ 4. If the commit fails due to pre-commit hook: fix the issue and create a NEW commit
119
+
120
+ Important notes:
121
+ - NEVER run additional commands to read or explore code, besides git bash commands
122
+ - NEVER use the TodoWrite or Agent tools
123
+ - DO NOT push to the remote repository unless the user explicitly asks you to do so
124
+ - IMPORTANT: Never use git commands with the -i flag (like git rebase -i or git add -i) since they require interactive input which is not supported.
125
+ - IMPORTANT: Do not use --no-edit with git rebase commands, as the --no-edit flag is not a valid option for git rebase.
126
+ - If there are no changes to commit (i.e., no untracked files and no modifications), do not create an empty commit
127
+ - In order to ensure good formatting, ALWAYS pass the commit message via a HEREDOC, a la this example:
128
+ <example>
129
+ git commit -m "$(cat <<'EOF'
130
+ Commit message here.
131
+
132
+ Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
133
+ EOF
134
+ )"
135
+ </example>
136
+
137
+ # Creating pull requests
138
+ Use the gh command via the Bash tool for ALL GitHub-related tasks including working with issues, pull requests, checks, and releases. If given a Github URL use the gh command to get the information needed.
139
+
140
+ IMPORTANT: When the user asks you to create a pull request, follow these steps carefully:
141
+
142
+ 1. You can call multiple tools in a single response. When multiple independent pieces of information are requested and all commands are likely to succeed, run multiple tool calls in parallel for optimal performance. run the following bash commands in parallel using the Bash tool, in order to understand the current state of the branch since it diverged from the main branch:
143
+ - Run a git status command to see all untracked files (never use -uall flag)
144
+ - Run a git diff command to see both staged and unstaged changes that will be committed
145
+ - Check if the current branch tracks a remote branch and is up to date with the remote, so you know if you need to push to the remote
146
+ - Run a git log command and `git diff [base-branch]...HEAD` to understand the full commit history for the current branch (from the time it diverged from the base branch)
147
+ 2. Analyze all changes that will be included in the pull request, making sure to look at all relevant commits (NOT just the latest commit, but ALL commits that will be included in the pull request!!!), and draft a pull request title and summary:
148
+ - Keep the PR title short (under 70 characters)
149
+ - Use the description/body for details, not the title
150
+ 3. You can call multiple tools in a single response. When multiple independent pieces of information are requested and all commands are likely to succeed, run multiple tool calls in parallel for optimal performance. run the following commands in parallel:
151
+ - Create new branch if needed
152
+ - Push to remote with -u flag if needed
153
+ - Create PR using gh pr create with the format below. Use a HEREDOC to pass the body to ensure correct formatting.
154
+ <example>
155
+ gh pr create --title "the pr title" --body "$(cat <<'EOF'
156
+ ## Summary
157
+ <1-3 bullet points>
158
+
159
+ ## Test plan
160
+ [Bulleted markdown checklist of TODOs for testing the pull request...]
161
+
162
+ 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
163
+ EOF
164
+ )"
165
+ </example>
166
+
167
+ Important:
168
+ - DO NOT use the TodoWrite or Agent tools
169
+ - Return the PR URL when you're done, so the user can see it
170
+
171
+ # Other common operations
172
+ - View comments on a Github PR: gh api repos/foo/bar/pulls/123/comments</textarea>
@@ -36,3 +36,15 @@ Edita archivos mediante reemplazo exacto de cadenas. Reemplaza `old_string` por
36
36
  ## Significado en cc-viewer
37
37
 
38
38
  Las llamadas a Edit aparecen en el registro de solicitudes como content blocks `tool_use`, cuyo `input` contiene `old_string` y `new_string`, lo que permite rastrear qué modificaciones hizo el modelo en los archivos.
39
+
40
+ ## Texto original
41
+
42
+ <textarea readonly>Performs exact string replacements in files.
43
+
44
+ Usage:
45
+ - You must use your `Read` tool at least once in the conversation before editing. This tool will error if you attempt an edit without reading the file.
46
+ - When editing text from Read tool output, ensure you preserve the exact indentation (tabs/spaces) as it appears AFTER the line number prefix. The line number prefix format is: spaces + line number + tab. Everything after that tab is the actual file content to match. Never include any part of the line number prefix in the old_string or new_string.
47
+ - ALWAYS prefer editing existing files in the codebase. NEVER write new files unless explicitly required.
48
+ - Only use emojis if the user explicitly requests it. Avoid adding emojis to files unless asked.
49
+ - The edit will FAIL if `old_string` is not unique in the file. Either provide a larger string with more surrounding context to make it unique or use `replace_all` to change every instance of `old_string`.
50
+ - Use `replace_all` for replacing and renaming strings across the file. This parameter is useful if you want to rename a variable for instance.</textarea>