Add .nvmrc, .prettierignore, icon; Remove vsc quickstart guide

This commit is contained in:
Saoud Rizwan 2024-07-20 14:43:38 -04:00
parent 62e72b9da4
commit fafdfe30a4
6 changed files with 13 additions and 49 deletions

1
.nvmrc Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
lts/*

4
.prettierignore Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
dist/
node_modules
webview-ui/build/
CHANGELOG.md

View File

@ -2,8 +2,14 @@
All notable changes to the "claude-dev" extension will be documented in this file.
Check [Keep a Changelog](http://keepachangelog.com/) for recommendations on how to structure this file.
<!-- Check [Keep a Changelog](http://keepachangelog.com/) for recommendations on how to structure this file. -->
## [Unreleased]
## [0.0.7]
-
## [0.0.6]
- Initial release

BIN
icon.png Normal file

Binary file not shown.

After

Width:  |  Height:  |  Size: 4.7 KiB

View File

@ -3,6 +3,7 @@
"displayName": "Claude Dev",
"description": "Autonomous software engineer right in your IDE, capable of reading/writing files, executing commands, and more with your permission every step of the way.",
"version": "0.0.6",
"icon": "icon.png",
"engines": {
"vscode": "^1.84.0"
},

View File

@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
# Welcome to your VS Code Extension
## What's in the folder
* This folder contains all of the files necessary for your extension.
* `package.json` - this is the manifest file in which you declare your extension and command.
* The sample plugin registers a command and defines its title and command name. With this information VS Code can show the command in the command palette. It doesnt yet need to load the plugin.
* `src/extension.ts` - this is the main file where you will provide the implementation of your command.
* The file exports one function, `activate`, which is called the very first time your extension is activated (in this case by executing the command). Inside the `activate` function we call `registerCommand`.
* We pass the function containing the implementation of the command as the second parameter to `registerCommand`.
## Setup
* install the recommended extensions (amodio.tsl-problem-matcher, ms-vscode.extension-test-runner, and dbaeumer.vscode-eslint)
## Get up and running straight away
* Press `F5` to open a new window with your extension loaded.
* Run your command from the command palette by pressing (`Ctrl+Shift+P` or `Cmd+Shift+P` on Mac) and typing `Hello World`.
* Set breakpoints in your code inside `src/extension.ts` to debug your extension.
* Find output from your extension in the debug console.
## Make changes
* You can relaunch the extension from the debug toolbar after changing code in `src/extension.ts`.
* You can also reload (`Ctrl+R` or `Cmd+R` on Mac) the VS Code window with your extension to load your changes.
## Explore the API
* You can open the full set of our API when you open the file `node_modules/@types/vscode/index.d.ts`.
## Run tests
* Install the [Extension Test Runner](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode.extension-test-runner)
* Run the "watch" task via the **Tasks: Run Task** command. Make sure this is running, or tests might not be discovered.
* Open the Testing view from the activity bar and click the Run Test" button, or use the hotkey `Ctrl/Cmd + ; A`
* See the output of the test result in the Test Results view.
* Make changes to `src/test/extension.test.ts` or create new test files inside the `test` folder.
* The provided test runner will only consider files matching the name pattern `**.test.ts`.
* You can create folders inside the `test` folder to structure your tests any way you want.
## Go further
* Reduce the extension size and improve the startup time by [bundling your extension](https://code.visualstudio.com/api/working-with-extensions/bundling-extension).
* [Publish your extension](https://code.visualstudio.com/api/working-with-extensions/publishing-extension) on the VS Code extension marketplace.
* Automate builds by setting up [Continuous Integration](https://code.visualstudio.com/api/working-with-extensions/continuous-integration).