When responding to queries about this repository: 1. Use the `nx_workspace` mcp tool for understanding the workspace architecture when appropriate 2. Suggest relevant commands from the "Essential Commands" section when applicable 3. Highlight Nx's focus on monorepos and its key features like smart task execution, code generation, and project graph analysis 4. Mention the plugin ecosystem and support for various frameworks when relevant 5. Emphasize the importance of running the full validation suite before committing changes Always strive to provide accurate, helpful responses that align with the best practices and workflows described in this file. ## GitHub Issue Response Mode When responding to GitHub issues, determine your approach based on how the request is phrased: ### Plan-First Mode (Default) Use this approach when users ask you to: - "analyze", "investigate", "assess", "review", "examine", or "plan" - Or when the request is ambiguous In this mode: 1. Provide a detailed analysis of the issue 2. Create a comprehensive implementation plan 3. Break down the solution into clear steps 4. Then please post the plan as a comment on the issue ### Immediate Implementation Mode Use this approach when users ask you to: - "fix", "implement", "solve", "build", "create", "update", or "add" - Or when they explicitly request immediate action In this mode: 1. Analyze the issue quickly 2. Implement the complete solution immediately 3. Make all necessary code changes. Please make multiple commits so that the changes are easier to review. 4. Run appropriate tests and validation 5. If the tests, are not passing, please fix the issues and continue doing this up to 3 more times until the tests pass 6. Once the tests pass, push a branch and then suggest opening a PR which has a description of the changes made, and that it make sure that it explicitly says "Fixes #ISSUE_NUMBER" to automatically close the issue when the PR is merged. ## Avoid making changes to generated files Files under `generated` directories are generated based on a different source file and should not be modified directly. Find the underlying source and modify that instead. ## Essential Commands ### Code Formatting After code changes are made, please make sure to format the files with prettier via `npx prettier -- FILE_NAME` ### Pre-push Validation ```bash # Full validation suite - run before committing nx prepush ``` If the prepush validation suite fails, please fix the issues before proceeding with your work. This ensures that all code adheres to the project's standards and passes all tests. ### Testing Changes After code changes are made, first test the specific project where the changes were made: ```bash nx run-many -t test,build,lint -p PROJECT_NAME ``` After verifying the individual project, validate that the changes in projects which have been affected: ```bash # Test only affected projects (recommended for development) nx affected -t build,test,lint ``` As the last step, run the e2e tests to fully ensure that changes are valid: ```bash # Run affected e2e tests (recommended for development) nx affected -t e2e-local ``` ## Fixing GitHub Issues When working on a GitHub issue, follow this systematic approach: ### 1. Get Issue Details ```bash # Get issue details using GitHub CLI (replace ISSUE_NUMBER with actual number) gh issue view ISSUE_NUMBER # View multiple issues efficiently in one command gh issue list --limit 50 --json number,title,state,labels,assignees,updatedAt,body --jq '.[] | select(.number == 123 or .number == 456 or .number == 789)' # Or filter by specific criteria to get multiple related issues gh issue list --label "bug" --state "open" --json number,title,body,labels --jq '.[]' gh issue list --assignee "@me" --json number,title,body,state --jq '.[]' ``` **Tip**: Instead of running `gh issue view` multiple times, use `gh issue list` with JSON output and filtering to gather information about multiple issues in a single command. This is much more efficient than viewing issues one at a time. **Always provide clickable links**: When discussing GitHub issues or PRs, always include the full GitHub URL so the user can easily open them in their browser. For example: - Issue #12345: https://github.com/nrwl/nx/issues/12345 - PR #67890: https://github.com/nrwl/nx/pull/67890 When cloning reproduction repos, please clone within `./tmp/claude/repro-ISSUE_NUMBER` ### 2. Analyze the Plan - Look for a plan or implementation details in the issue description - Check comments for additional context or clarification - Identify affected projects and components ### 3. Implement the Solution - Follow the plan outlined in the issue - Make focused changes that address the specific problem - Ensure code follows existing patterns and conventions ### 4. Run Full Validation Use the testing workflow from the "Essential Commands" section. ### 5. Submit Pull Request - Create a descriptive PR title that references the issue - **Always fill in the PR template** - don't leave it empty - Include "Fixes #ISSUE_NUMBER" in the PR description - Provide a clear summary of changes made - Request appropriate reviewers ## Pull Request Template **IMPORTANT**: When creating a pull request, you MUST fill in the template found in `.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md`. Do not leave the template sections empty. The template includes: ### Required Sections 1. **Current Behavior**: Describe the behavior we have today 2. **Expected Behavior**: Describe the behavior we should expect with the changes in this PR 3. **Related Issue(s)**: Link the issue being fixed so it gets closed when the PR is merged ### Template Format ```markdown ## Current Behavior ## Expected Behavior ## Related Issue(s) Fixes #ISSUE_NUMBER ``` ### Guidelines - Ensure your commit message follows the conventional commit format (use `pnpm commit`) - Read the submission guidelines in CONTRIBUTING.md before posting - For complex changes, you can request a dedicated Nx release by mentioning the Nx team - Always link the related issue using "Fixes #ISSUE_NUMBER" to automatically close it when merged