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zfxaction26_1/AGENTS.md
2026-04-21 17:00:51 +02:00

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Repository Guidelines

Project Structure & Module Organization

This repository should be organized as a Godot 4 .NET project from the root:

  • project.godot project entrypoint
  • scenes/ playable scenes such as scenes/player/Player.tscn
  • scripts/ C# gameplay code paired with scenes
  • assets/ sprites, audio, fonts, and tile sets
  • addons/ third-party Godot plugins when needed
  • build/ local export output; do not commit generated files unless release workflow requires it

Keep scene and script paths aligned. Example: scenes/enemies/Slime.tscn with scripts/enemies/Slime.cs.

Build, Test, and Development Commands

Run commands from the repository root. On Windows PowerShell, use the repo-local wrapper as .\godot.

  • .\godot --editor --path . opens the project in the editor
  • .\godot --headless --path . --build-solutions builds generated C# project files through Godot
  • .\godot --headless --path . --export-release "Windows Desktop" ./build/zfxaction26_1.exe exports a desktop build when presets are configured

Document any custom wrapper scripts in README.md if the team adds them later.

Coding Style & Naming Conventions

For C#, use 4 spaces for indentation, nullable reference types, and one primary public type per file. Keep Godot node scripts thin and move reusable gameplay rules into plain C# classes that do not depend on scene state.

  • PascalCase for classes, methods, properties, scene files, and C# scripts: PlayerController, PlayerController.cs
  • m_PascalCase for private fields
  • s_PascalCase for static fields
  • camelCase for locals and parameters
  • snake_case for asset filenames: player_idle.png, forest_theme.ogg

Use partial classes only when Godot generation requires them; avoid mixing unrelated responsibilities in one node script. Keep a strict element order inside of types:

  • Nested types
  • Constructors
  • Disposable implementation
  • Methods
  • Properties
  • Static Members
  • Events
  • Fields

Working rules

  • Follow operating system specific rules, either AGENTS.windows.md or AGENTS.linux.md
  • Before beginning with the edit phase, always present a plan first. Only begin editing after the user approves the plan.
  • Don't make assumptions in the plan. If necessary, ask all clarifying questions before presenting the final plan.
  • After every iteration, evaluate if the test coverage would fall below 100%, and write tests if necessary.
  • After every iteration, before committing, run jb cleanupcode --build=False $file1;$file2;... for every C# file you touched.
  • After every iteration, if there's a relevant documentation for the current task, update it according to the change.
    • Update the wording of touched concerns instead of introducing incremental change reports
    • The documentation should always represent the current state in its entirety and not derail into a historical development log.
  • After every iteration, do a git commit with a brief summary of the changes as a commit message.
  • Keep changes small and commit often. If one iteration encompasses many smaller tasks with more than one commit, create a git branch and do the commits there. Let me review the branch before merging it back to master.
  • When multiple commits are necessary, pause after every commit and ask the user to give a command to proceed.
  • If you find unexpected changes in the code (deletions, changes, diff results that were not communicated), never revert them and never restore the old state. Assume that those changes happened with intent.
  • Never use git restore, git checkout --, reset commands, or equivalent rollback actions to discard local changes unless the user explicitly asks for that exact rollback.

Output generation

User

  • For the user, you talk like a caveman. Speak only short grunts, conveying as much information in as few words as possible. Communicate in english.
  • Give no explanations unless explicitly asked.
  • No fillers like 'happy to help' or 'grunt'. Do task first. Show result. Stop.
  • For tools: "Tool work." then output the result and words like "Question:", "Problem.", "Plan?", "Done."
  • When working against a plan, don't give updates on partial plan milestones, check all plan tasks quietly until completely done.

Reasoning

  • Feel free to speak to yourself in whatever language suits you best, focusing on concise, compact and essential information exchange.

ExecPlans

  • When writing complex features or significant refactors, use an ExecPlan (as described in PLANS.md) from design to implementation.