code-tour
Create CodeTour `.tour` files — persona-targeted, step-by-step walkthroughs with real file and line anchors. Use for onboarding tours, architecture walkthroughs, PR tours, RCA tours, and structured "explain how this works" requests.
Best use case
code-tour is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Create CodeTour `.tour` files — persona-targeted, step-by-step walkthroughs with real file and line anchors. Use for onboarding tours, architecture walkthroughs, PR tours, RCA tours, and structured "explain how this works" requests.
Teams using code-tour should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/code-tour/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How code-tour Compares
| Feature / Agent | code-tour | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Create CodeTour `.tour` files — persona-targeted, step-by-step walkthroughs with real file and line anchors. Use for onboarding tours, architecture walkthroughs, PR tours, RCA tours, and structured "explain how this works" requests.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Code Tour
Create **CodeTour** `.tour` files for codebase walkthroughs that open directly to real files and line ranges. Tours live in `.tours/` and are meant for the CodeTour format, not ad hoc Markdown notes.
A good tour is a narrative for a specific reader:
- what they are looking at
- why it matters
- what path they should follow next
Only create `.tour` JSON files. Do not modify source code as part of this skill.
## When to Use
Use this skill when:
- the user asks for a code tour, onboarding tour, architecture walkthrough, or PR tour
- the user says "explain how X works" and wants a reusable guided artifact
- the user wants a ramp-up path for a new engineer or reviewer
- the task is better served by a guided sequence than a flat summary
Examples:
- onboarding a new maintainer
- architecture tour for one service or package
- PR-review walk-through anchored to changed files
- RCA tour showing the failure path
- security review tour of trust boundaries and key checks
## When NOT to Use
| Instead of code-tour | Use |
| --- | --- |
| A one-off explanation in chat is enough | answer directly |
| The user wants prose docs, not a `.tour` artifact | `documentation-lookup` or repo docs editing |
| The task is implementation or refactoring | do the implementation work |
| The task is broad codebase onboarding without a tour artifact | `codebase-onboarding` |
## Workflow
### 1. Discover
Explore the repo before writing anything:
- README and package/app entry points
- folder structure
- relevant config files
- the changed files if the tour is PR-focused
Do not start writing steps before you understand the shape of the code.
### 2. Infer the reader
Decide the persona and depth from the request.
| Request shape | Persona | Suggested depth |
| --- | --- | --- |
| "onboarding", "new joiner" | `new-joiner` | 9-13 steps |
| "quick tour", "vibe check" | `vibecoder` | 5-8 steps |
| "architecture" | `architect` | 14-18 steps |
| "tour this PR" | `pr-reviewer` | 7-11 steps |
| "why did this break" | `rca-investigator` | 7-11 steps |
| "security review" | `security-reviewer` | 7-11 steps |
| "explain how this feature works" | `feature-explainer` | 7-11 steps |
| "debug this path" | `bug-fixer` | 7-11 steps |
### 3. Read and verify anchors
Every file path and line anchor must be real:
- confirm the file exists
- confirm the line numbers are in range
- if using a selection, verify the exact block
- if the file is volatile, prefer a pattern-based anchor
Never guess line numbers.
### 4. Write the `.tour`
Write to:
```text
.tours/<persona>-<focus>.tour
```
Keep the path deterministic and readable.
### 5. Validate
Before finishing:
- every referenced path exists
- every line or selection is valid
- the first step is anchored to a real file or directory
- the tour tells a coherent story rather than listing files
## Step Types
### Content
Use sparingly, usually only for a closing step:
```json
{ "title": "Next Steps", "description": "You can now trace the request path end to end." }
```
Do not make the first step content-only.
### Directory
Use to orient the reader to a module:
```json
{ "directory": "src/services", "title": "Service Layer", "description": "The core orchestration logic lives here." }
```
### File + line
This is the default step type:
```json
{ "file": "src/auth/middleware.ts", "line": 42, "title": "Auth Gate", "description": "Every protected request passes here first." }
```
### Selection
Use when one code block matters more than the whole file:
```json
{
"file": "src/core/pipeline.ts",
"selection": {
"start": { "line": 15, "character": 0 },
"end": { "line": 34, "character": 0 }
},
"title": "Request Pipeline",
"description": "This block wires validation, auth, and downstream execution."
}
```
### Pattern
Use when exact lines may drift:
```json
{ "file": "src/app.ts", "pattern": "export default class App", "title": "Application Entry" }
```
### URI
Use for PRs, issues, or docs when helpful:
```json
{ "uri": "https://github.com/org/repo/pull/456", "title": "The PR" }
```
## Writing Rule: SMIG
Each description should answer:
- **Situation**: what the reader is looking at
- **Mechanism**: how it works
- **Implication**: why it matters for this persona
- **Gotcha**: what a smart reader might miss
Keep descriptions compact, specific, and grounded in the actual code.
## Narrative Shape
Use this arc unless the task clearly needs something different:
1. orientation
2. module map
3. core execution path
4. edge case or gotcha
5. closing / next move
The tour should feel like a path, not an inventory.
## Example
```json
{
"$schema": "https://aka.ms/codetour-schema",
"title": "API Service Tour",
"description": "Walkthrough of the request path for the payments service.",
"ref": "main",
"steps": [
{
"directory": "src",
"title": "Source Root",
"description": "All runtime code for the service starts here."
},
{
"file": "src/server.ts",
"line": 12,
"title": "Entry Point",
"description": "The server boots here and wires middleware before any route is reached."
},
{
"file": "src/routes/payments.ts",
"line": 8,
"title": "Payment Routes",
"description": "Every payments request enters through this router before hitting service logic."
},
{
"title": "Next Steps",
"description": "You can now follow any payment request end to end with the main anchors in place."
}
]
}
```
## Anti-Patterns
| Anti-pattern | Fix |
| --- | --- |
| Flat file listing | Tell a story with dependency between steps |
| Generic descriptions | Name the concrete code path or pattern |
| Guessed anchors | Verify every file and line first |
| Too many steps for a quick tour | Cut aggressively |
| First step is content-only | Anchor the first step to a real file or directory |
| Persona mismatch | Write for the actual reader, not a generic engineer |
## Best Practices
- keep step count proportional to repo size and persona depth
- use directory steps for orientation, file steps for substance
- for PR tours, cover changed files first
- for monorepos, scope to the relevant packages instead of touring everything
- close with what the reader can now do, not a recap
## Related Skills
- `codebase-onboarding`
- `coding-standards`
- `council`
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