- Contributing to Continue
- β€οΈ Ways to Contribute
This GitHub project board is a list of ideas for how you can contribute to Continue. These aren't the only ways, but are a great starting point if you are new to the project.
If you find a bug, please create an issue to report it! A great bug report includes:
- A description of the bug
- Steps to reproduce
- What you expected to happen
- What actually happened
- Screenshots or videos
Continue is quickly adding features, and we'd love to hear which are the most important to you. The best ways to suggest an enhancement are
-
Create an issue
- First, check whether a similar proposal has already been made
- If not, create an issue
- Please describe the enhancement in as much detail as you can, and why it would be useful
-
Join the Continue Discord and tell us about your idea in the
#feedback
channel
Continue is continuously improving, but a feature isn't complete until it is reflected in the documentation! If you see something out-of-date or missing, you can help by clicking "Edit this page" at the bottom of any page on docs.continue.dev.
You can run the documentation server locally using either of the following methods:
-
Open your terminal and navigate to the
docs
subdirectory of the project. Thedocusaurus.config.js
file you'll see there is a sign you're in the right place. -
Run the following command to install the necessary dependencies for the documentation server:
npm install
-
Run the following command to start the documentation server:
npm run start
-
Open VS Code in the root directory of the project.
-
Open the VS Code command pallet (
cmd/ctrl+shift+p
) and selectTasks: Run Task
. -
Look for the
docs:start
task and select it.
This will start a local server and you can see the documentation rendered in your default browser, typically accessible at http://localhost:3000
.
You should have Node.js version 20.11.0 (LTS) or higher installed. You can get it on nodejs.org or, if you are using NVM (Node Version Manager), you can set the correct version of Node.js for this project by running the following command in the root of the project:
nvm use
-
Go to the Continue GitHub repository and fork it to your GitHub account.
-
Clone your forked repository to your local machine. Use:
git clone https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/continue.git
-
Navigate to the cloned directory and make sure you are on the main branch. Create your feature/fix branch from there, like so:
git checkout -b 123-my-feature-branch
-
Send your pull request to the main branch.
-
Open the VS Code command pallet (
cmd/ctrl+shift+p
) and selectTasks: Run Task
and then selectinstall-all-dependencies
-
Start debugging:
- Switch to Run and Debug view
- Select
Launch extension
from drop down - Hit play button
- This will start the extension in debug mode and open a new VS Code window with it installed
- The new VS Code window with the extension is referred to as the Host VS Code
- The window you started debugging from is referred to as the Main VS Code
-
To package the extension, run
npm run package
in theextensions/vscode
directory. This will generateextensions/vscode/build/continue-{VERSION}.vsix
, which you can install by right-clicking and selecting "Install Extension VSIX".
Breakpoints can be used in both the core
and extensions/vscode
folders while debugging, but are not currently supported inside of gui
code.
Hot-reloading is enabled with Vite, so if you make any changes to the gui
, they should be automatically reflected without rebuilding. In some cases, you may need to refresh the Host VS Code window to see the changes.
Similarly, any changes to core
or extensions/vscode
will be automatically included by just reloading the Host VS Code window with cmd/ctrl+shift+p "Reload Window".
See the CONTRIBUTING.md
for the JetBrains extension.
We keep a single permanent branch: main
. When we are ready to create a "pre-release" version, we create a tag on the main
branch titled v0.9.x-vscode
, which automatically triggers the workflow in preview.yaml, which builds and releases a version of the VS Code extension. When a release has been sufficiently tested, we will create a new release titled v0.8.x-vscode
, triggering a similar workflow in main.yaml, which will build and release a main release of the VS Code extension. Any hotfixes can be made by creating a feature branch from the tag for the release in question. This workflow is well explained by http://releaseflow.org.
Continue uses Prettier to format JavaScript/TypeScript. Please install the Prettier extension in VS Code and enable "Format on Save" in your settings.
The slash command interface, defined in core/index.d.ts, requires you to define a name
(the text that will be typed to invoke the command), a description
(the text that will be shown in the slash command menu), and a run
function that will be called when the command is invoked. The run
function is an async generator that yields the content to be displayed in the chat. The run
function is passed a ContinueSDK
object that can be used to interact with the IDE, call the LLM, and see the chat history, among a few other utilities.
export interface SlashCommand {
name: string;
description: string;
params?: { [key: string]: any };
run: (sdk: ContinueSDK) => AsyncGenerator<string | undefined>;
}
There are many example of slash commands in core/commands/slash that we recommend borrowing from. Once you've created your new SlashCommand
in this folder, also be sure to complete the following:
- Add your command to the array in core/commands/slash/index.ts
- Add your command to the list in
config_schema.json
. This makes sure that Intellisense shows users what commands are available for your provider when they are editingconfig.json
. If there are any parameters that your command accepts, you should also follow existing examples in adding them to the JSON Schema.
A ContextProvider
is a Continue plugin that lets type '@' to quickly select documents as context for the language model. The IContextProvider
interface is defined in core/index.d.ts
, but all built-in context providers extend BaseContextProvider
.
Before defining your context provider, determine which "type" you want to create. The "query"
type will show a small text input when selected, giving the user the chance to enter something like a Google search query for the GoogleContextProvider
. The "submenu"
type will open up a submenu of items that can be searched through and selected. Examples are the GitHubIssuesContextProvider
and the DocsContextProvider
. The "normal"
type will just immediately add the context item. Examples include the DiffContextProvider
and the OpenFilesContextProvider
.
After you've written your context provider, make sure to complete the following:
- Add it to the array of context providers in core/context/providers/index.ts
- Add it to the
ContextProviderName
type in core/index.d.ts - Add it to the list in
config_schema.json
. If there are any parameters that your context provider accepts, you should also follow existing examples in adding them to the JSON Schema.
Continue has support for more than a dozen different LLM "providers", making it easy to use models running on OpenAI, Ollama, Together, LM Studio, Msty, and more. You can find all of the existing providers here, and if you see one missing, you can add it with the following steps:
- Create a new file in the
core/llm/llms
directory. The name of the file should be the name of the provider, and it should export a class that extendsBaseLLM
. This class should contain the following minimal implementation. We recommend viewing pre-existing providers for more details. The LlamaCpp Provider is a good simple example.
providerName
- the identifier for your provider- At least one of
_streamComplete
or_streamChat
- This is the function that makes the request to the API and returns the streamed response. You only need to implement one because Continue can automatically convert between "chat" and "raw completion".
- Add your provider to the
LLMs
array in core/llm/llms/index.ts. - If your provider supports images, add it to the
PROVIDER_SUPPORTS_IMAGES
array in core/llm/autodetect.ts. - Add the necessary JSON Schema types to
config_schema.json
. This makes sure that Intellisense shows users what options are available for your provider when they are editingconfig.json
. - Add a documentation page for your provider in
docs/docs/customize/model-providers
. This should show an example of configuring your provider inconfig.json
and explain what options are available.
While any model that works with a supported provider can be used with Continue, we keep a list of recommended models that can be automatically configured from the UI or config.json
. The following files should be updated when adding a model:
- config_schema.json - This is the JSON Schema definition that is used to validate
config.json
. You'll notice a number of rules defined in "definitions.ModelDescription.allOf". Here is where you write rules that can specify something like "for the provider 'anthropic', only models 'claude-2' and 'claude-instant-1' are allowed. Look through all of these rules and make sure that your model is included for providers that support it. - AddNewModel page - This directory defines which model options are shown in the side bar model selection UI. To add a new model:
- Add a
ModelPackage
entry for the model into configs/models.ts, following the lead of the many examples near the top of the file - Add the model within its provider's array to AddNewModel.tsx (add provider if needed)
- Add a
- index.d.ts - This file defines the TypeScript types used throughout Continue. You'll find a
ModelName
type. Be sure to add the name of your model to this. - LLM Providers: Since many providers use their own custom strings to identify models, you'll have to add the translation from Continue's model name (the one you added to
index.d.ts
) and the model string for each of these providers: Ollama, Together, and Replicate. You can find their full model lists here: Ollama, Together, Replicate. - Prompt Templates - In this file you'll find the
autodetectTemplateType
function. Make sure that for the model name you just added, this function returns the correct template type. This is assuming that the chat template for that model is already built in Continue. If not, you will have to add the template type and corresponding edit and chat templates.
Continue's @docs context provider lets you easily reference entire documentation sites and then uses embeddings to add the most relevant pages to context. To make the experience as smooth as possible, we pre-index many of the most popular documentation sites. If you'd like to add new documentation to this list, just add an object to the list in preIndexedDocs.ts. startUrl
is where the crawler will start and rootUrl
will filter out any pages not on that site and under the path of rootUrl
.
Continue consists of 2 parts that are split so that it can be extended to work in other IDEs as easily as possible:
-
Continue GUI - The Continue GUI is a React application that gives the user control over Continue. It displays the current chat history, allows the user to ask questions, invoke slash commands, and use context providers. The GUI also handles most state and holds as much of the logic as possible so that it can be reused between IDEs.
-
Continue Extension - The Continue Extension is a plugin for the IDE which implements the IDE Interface. This allows the GUI to request information from or actions to be taken within the IDE. This same interface is used regardless of IDE. The first Continue extensions we have built are for VS Code and JetBrains, but we plan to build clients for other IDEs in the future. The IDE Client must 1. implement IDE Interface, as is done here for VS Code and 2. display the Continue GUI in a sidebar, like here.
The starting point for the VS Code extension is activate.ts. The activateExtension
function here will register all commands and load the Continue GUI in the sidebar of the IDE as a webview.
The JetBrains extension is currently in alpha testing. Please reach out on Discord if you are interested in contributing to its development.