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.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
Please install the "code-tour" skill from askskill: 1. Download https://raw.githubusercontent.com/affaan-m/ECC/main/skills/code-tour/SKILL.md 2. Save it as ~/.claude/skills/code-tour/SKILL.md 3. Reload skills and tell me it's ready
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:
Only create .tour JSON files. Do not modify source code as part of this skill.
Use this skill when:
Examples:
| 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 |
Explore the repo before writing anything:
Do not start writing steps before you understand the shape of the code.
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 |
Every file path and line anchor must be real:
Never guess line numbers.
.tourWrite to:
.tours/<persona>-<focus>.tour
Keep the path deterministic and readable.
Before finishing:
Use sparingly, usually only for a closing step:
{ "title": "Next Steps", "description": "You can now trace the request path end to end." }
Do not make the first step content-only.
Use to orient the reader to a module:
{ "directory": "src/services", "title": "Service Layer", "description": "The core orchestration logic lives here." }
This is the default step type:
{ "file": "src/auth/middleware.ts", "line": 42, "title": "Auth Gate", "description": "Every protected request passes here first." }
Use when one code block matters more than the whole file:
{
"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."
}
Use when exact lines may drift:
{ "file": "src/app.ts", "pattern": "export default class App", "title": "Application Entry" }
…
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