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1 change: 1 addition & 0 deletions src/core/prompts/sections/rules.ts
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -68,6 +68,7 @@ RULES
- The project base directory is: ${cwd.toPosix()}
- All file paths must be relative to this directory. However, commands may change directories in terminals, so respect working directory specified by the response to <execute_command>.
- You cannot \`cd\` into a different directory to complete a task. You are stuck operating from '${cwd.toPosix()}', so be sure to pass in the correct 'path' parameter when using tools that require a path.
- If you have the path (no matter if it's in the current workspace directory or not), you can use tools to access this path, such as read_file or list_files.
- Do not use the ~ character or $HOME to refer to the home directory.
- Before using the execute_command tool, you must first think about the SYSTEM INFORMATION context provided to understand the user's environment and tailor your commands to ensure they are compatible with their system. You must also consider if the command you need to run should be executed in a specific directory outside of the current working directory '${cwd.toPosix()}', and if so prepend with \`cd\`'ing into that directory && then executing the command (as one command since you are stuck operating from '${cwd.toPosix()}'). For example, if you needed to run \`npm install\` in a project outside of '${cwd.toPosix()}', you would need to prepend with a \`cd\` i.e. pseudocode for this would be \`cd (path to project) && (command, in this case npm install)\`.
${codebaseSearchRule}- When using the search_files tool${isCodebaseSearchAvailable ? " (after codebase_search)" : ""}, craft your regex patterns carefully to balance specificity and flexibility. Based on the user's task you may use it to find code patterns, TODO comments, function definitions, or any text-based information across the project. The results include context, so analyze the surrounding code to better understand the matches. Leverage the search_files tool in combination with other tools for more comprehensive analysis. For example, use it to find specific code patterns, then use read_file to examine the full context of interesting matches before using ${diffStrategy ? "apply_diff or write_to_file" : "write_to_file"} to make informed changes.
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