The code-tour skill mentioned the CodeTour 'ref' field only in an example, with no explanation of its behavior. CodeTour resolves each step's file content from the git revision named by 'ref' (not the working tree) whenever ref differs from HEAD, so any file that does not exist at that revision fails to open with 'The editor could not be opened because the file was not found' - even though the file is present on disk. This bit a generated PR tour where ref was set to the base branch (develop): every file ADDED by the PR is absent on the base, so all new-file steps 404'd while the tour tree and comments still rendered, making the cause non-obvious. Adds a 'The ref Field' section explaining the resolution behavior and the rule that PR tours must pin ref to the branch head (never the base), plus a validation step to confirm every referenced file exists at the chosen ref.
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name, description, metadata
| name | description | metadata | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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. |
|
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:
.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
refpoints at a branch or commit that actually has every file the tour references (see below) - the tour tells a coherent story rather than listing files
The ref Field
ref ties the tour to a git branch or commit. It matters more than it looks: when ref is not the branch the reader has checked out, CodeTour opens each step's file from that revision in git, not from the files on disk. If a file is not in that revision, the step will not open — the reader sees "The editor could not be opened because the file was not found" even though the file is sitting right there. The tour and its comments still show, so the real cause is easy to miss.
Pick ref by tour type:
| Tour type | Set ref to |
|---|---|
| PR tour | the PR branch — never the base branch |
| Onboarding / architecture | the branch the reader will be on (often main), or leave it out |
| Not sure | leave ref out, so CodeTour reads files straight from disk |
The PR case is the common trap: a PR usually adds new files, and new files do not exist on the base branch yet. Point ref at the base (e.g. develop) and every step on a new file fails to open.
Before finishing, confirm each step's file actually exists at the ref you chose.
Step Types
Content
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.
Directory
Use to orient the reader to a module:
{ "directory": "src/services", "title": "Service Layer", "description": "The core orchestration logic lives here." }
File + line
This is the default step type:
{ "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:
{
"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:
{ "file": "src/app.ts", "pattern": "export default class App", "title": "Application Entry" }
URI
Use for PRs, issues, or docs when helpful:
{ "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:
- orientation
- module map
- core execution path
- edge case or gotcha
- closing / next move
The tour should feel like a path, not an inventory.
Example
{
"$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-onboardingcoding-standardscouncil- official upstream format:
microsoft/codetour