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A tool to convert code snippets into AI prompts for documentation or explanation purposes.

Project description

Code2Prompt

PyPI version

GitHub Stars GitHub Forks PyPI downloads PyPI version License: MIT

Code2Prompt is a powerful command-line tool that generates comprehensive prompts from codebases, designed to streamline interactions between developers and Large Language Models (LLMs) for code analysis, documentation, and improvement tasks.

Table of Contents

  1. Why Code2Prompt?
  2. Features
  3. Installation
  4. Quick Start
  5. Usage
  6. Options
  7. Examples
  8. Templating System
  9. Integration with LLM CLI
  10. GitHub Actions Integration
  11. Configuration File
  12. Troubleshooting
  13. Contributing
  14. License

Code2Prompt: Transform Your Codebase into AI-Ready Prompts

PyPI version GitHub Stars License: MIT

Supercharge Your AI-Assisted Development

Code2Prompt is a powerful, open-source command-line tool that bridges the gap between your codebase and Large Language Models (LLMs). By converting your entire project into a comprehensive, AI-friendly prompt, Code2Prompt enables you to leverage the full potential of AI for code analysis, documentation, and improvement tasks.

🚀 Key Features

  • Holistic Codebase Representation: Generate a well-structured Markdown prompt that captures your entire project's essence.
  • Intelligent Source Tree Generation: Create a clear, hierarchical view of your codebase structure.
  • Customizable Prompt Templates: Tailor your output using Jinja2 templates to suit specific AI tasks.
  • Smart Token Management: Count and optimize tokens to ensure compatibility with various LLM token limits.
  • Gitignore Integration: Respect your project's .gitignore rules for accurate representation.
  • Flexible File Handling: Filter and exclude files using powerful glob patterns.
  • Clipboard Ready: Instantly copy generated prompts to your clipboard for quick AI interactions.
  • Multiple Output Options: Save to file or display in the console.
  • Enhanced Code Readability: Add line numbers to source code blocks for precise referencing.

💡 Why Code2Prompt?

  • Contextual Understanding: Provide LLMs with a comprehensive view of your project for more accurate suggestions and analysis.
  • Consistency Boost: Maintain coding style and conventions across your entire project.
  • Efficient Refactoring: Enable better interdependency analysis and smarter refactoring recommendations.
  • Improved Documentation: Generate contextually relevant documentation that truly reflects your codebase.
  • Pattern Recognition: Help LLMs learn and apply your project-specific patterns and idioms.

Transform the way you interact with AI for software development. With Code2Prompt, harness the full power of your codebase in every AI conversation.

Ready to elevate your AI-assisted development? Let's dive in! 🏊‍♂️

Installation

Choose one of the following methods to install Code2Prompt:

Using pip

pip install code2prompt

Using pipx (recommended)

pipx install code2prompt

Quick Start

  1. Generate a prompt from a single Python file:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/your/script.py
    
  2. Process an entire project directory and save the output:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/your/project --output project_summary.md
    
  3. Generate a prompt for multiple files, excluding tests:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/src --path /path/to/lib --exclude "*/tests/*" --output codebase_summary.md
    

Usage

The basic syntax for Code2Prompt is:

code2prompt --path /path/to/your/code [OPTIONS]

For multiple paths:

code2prompt --path /path/to/dir1 --path /path/to/file2.py [OPTIONS]

Options

Option Short Description
--path -p Path(s) to the directory or file to process (required, multiple allowed)
--output -o Name of the output Markdown file
--gitignore -g Path to the .gitignore file
--filter -f Comma-separated filter patterns to include files (e.g., ".py,.js")
--exclude -e Comma-separated patterns to exclude files (e.g., ".txt,.md")
--case-sensitive Perform case-sensitive pattern matching
--suppress-comments -s Strip comments from the code files
--line-number -ln Add line numbers to source code blocks
--no-codeblock Disable wrapping code inside markdown code blocks
--template -t Path to a Jinja2 template file for custom prompt generation
--tokens Display the token count of the generated prompt
--encoding Specify the tokenizer encoding to use (default: "cl100k_base")
--create-templates Create a templates directory with example templates
--version -v Show the version and exit

Command Parameters

--filter or -f and --exclude or -e

The --filter and --exclude options allow you to specify patterns for files or directories that should be included in or excluded from processing, respectively.

Syntax:

--filter "PATTERN1,PATTERN2,..."
--exclude "PATTERN1,PATTERN2,..."

or

-f "PATTERN1,PATTERN2,..."
-e "PATTERN1,PATTERN2,..."

Description:

  • Both options accept a comma-separated list of patterns.
  • Patterns can include wildcards (*) and directory indicators (**).
  • Case-sensitive by default (use --case-sensitive flag to change this behavior).
  • --exclude patterns take precedence over --filter patterns.

Examples:

  1. Include only Python files:

    --filter "**.py"
    
  2. Exclude all Markdown files:

    --exclude "**.md"
    
  3. Include specific file types in the src directory:

    --filter "src/**.{js,ts}"
    
  4. Exclude multiple file types and a specific directory:

    --exclude "**.log,**.tmp,**/node_modules/**"
    
  5. Include all files except those in 'test' directories:

    --filter "**" --exclude "**/test/**"
    
  6. Complex filtering (include JavaScript files, exclude minified and test files):

    --filter "**.js" --exclude "**.min.js,**test**.js"
    
  7. Include specific files across all directories:

    --filter "**/config.json,**/README.md"
    
  8. Exclude temporary files and directories:

    --exclude "**/.cache/**,**/tmp/**,**.tmp"
    
  9. Include source files but exclude build output:

    --filter "src/**/*.{js,ts}" --exclude "**/dist/**,**/build/**"
    
  10. Exclude version control and IDE-specific files:

    --exclude "**/.git/**,**/.vscode/**,**/.idea/**"
    

Important Notes:

  • Always use double quotes around patterns to prevent shell interpretation of special characters.
  • Patterns are matched against the full path of each file, relative to the project root.
  • The ** wildcard matches any number of directories.
  • Single * matches any characters within a single directory or filename.
  • Use commas to separate multiple patterns within the same option.
  • Combine --filter and --exclude for fine-grained control over which files are processed.

Best Practices:

  1. Start with broader patterns and refine as needed.
  2. Test your patterns on a small subset of your project first.
  3. Use the --case-sensitive flag if you need to distinguish between similarly named files with different cases.
  4. When working with complex projects, consider using a configuration file to manage your filter and exclude patterns.

By using the --filter and --exclude options effectively and safely (with proper quoting), you can precisely control which files are processed in your project, ensuring both accuracy and security in your command execution.

Examples

  1. Generate documentation for a Python library:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/library --output library_docs.md --suppress-comments --line-number --filter "*.py"
    
  2. Prepare a codebase summary for a code review, focusing on JavaScript and TypeScript files:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/project --filter "*.js,*.ts" --exclude "node_modules/*,dist/*" --template code_review.j2 --output code_review.md
    
  3. Create input for an AI model to suggest improvements, focusing on a specific directory:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/src/components --suppress-comments --tokens --encoding cl100k_base --output ai_input.md
    
  4. Analyze comment density across a multi-language project:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/project --template comment_density.j2 --output comment_analysis.md --filter "*.py,*.js,*.java"
    
  5. Generate a prompt for a specific set of files, adding line numbers:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/important_file1.py --path /path/to/important_file2.js --line-number --output critical_files.md
    

Templating System

Code2Prompt supports custom output formatting using Jinja2 templates. To use a custom template:

code2prompt --path /path/to/code --template /path/to/your/template.j2

Creating Template Examples

Use the --create-templates command to generate example templates:

code2prompt --create-templates

This creates a templates directory with sample Jinja2 templates, including:

For full template documentation, see Documentation Templating.

Integration with LLM CLI

Code2Prompt can be integrated with Simon Willison's llm CLI tool for enhanced code analysis or qllm, or for the Rust lovers hiramu-cli.

Installation

pip install code2prompt llm

Basic Usage

  1. Generate a code summary and analyze it with an LLM:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/your/project | llm "Analyze this codebase and provide insights on its structure and potential improvements"
    
  2. Process a specific file and get refactoring suggestions:

    code2prompt --path /path/to/your/script.py | llm "Suggest refactoring improvements for this code"
    

For more advanced use cases, refer to the Integration with LLM CLI section in the full documentation.

GitHub Actions Integration

You can integrate Code2Prompt into your GitHub Actions workflow. Here's an example:

name: Code Analysis
on: [push]
jobs:
  analyze-code:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - uses: actions/checkout@v2
    - name: Set up Python
      uses: actions/setup-python@v2
      with:
        python-version: '3.x'
    - name: Install dependencies
      run: |
        pip install code2prompt llm
    - name: Analyze codebase
      run: |
        code2prompt --path . | llm "Perform a comprehensive analysis of this codebase. Identify areas for improvement, potential bugs, and suggest optimizations." > analysis.md
    - name: Upload analysis
      uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
      with:
        name: code-analysis
        path: analysis.md

Understanding Tokens and Token Types in Code2Prompt

Tokens are the basic units of text that language models process. They can be words, parts of words, or even punctuation marks. Different tokenizer encodings split text into tokens in various ways. Code2Prompt supports multiple token types through its --encoding option, with "cl100k_base" as the default. This encoding, used by models like GPT-3.5 and GPT-4, is adept at handling code and technical content. Other common encodings include "p50k_base" (used by earlier GPT-3 models) and "r50k_base" (used by models like CodeX).

To count tokens in your generated prompt, use the --tokens flag:

code2prompt --path /your/project --tokens

For a specific encoding:

code2prompt --path /your/project --tokens --encoding p50k_base

Understanding token counts is crucial when working with AI models that have token limits, ensuring your prompts fit within the model's context window.

Token Price Estimation

Code2Prompt now includes a powerful feature for estimating token prices across various AI providers and models. Use the --price option in conjunction with --tokens to display a comprehensive breakdown of estimated costs. This feature calculates prices based on both input and output tokens, with input tokens determined by your codebase and a default of 1000 output tokens (customizable via --output-tokens). You can specify a particular provider or model, or view prices across all available options. This functionality helps developers make informed decisions about AI model usage and cost management. For example:

code2prompt --path /your/project --tokens --price --provider openai --model gpt-4

This command will analyze your project, count the tokens, and provide a detailed price estimation for OpenAI's GPT-4 model.

Configuration File

Code2Prompt supports a .code2promptrc configuration file in JSON format for setting default options. Place this file in your project or home directory.

Example .code2promptrc:

{
  "suppress_comments": true,
  "line_number": true,
  "encoding": "cl100k_base",
  "filter": "*.py,*.js",
  "exclude": "tests/*,docs/*"
}

Troubleshooting

  1. Issue: Code2Prompt is not recognizing my .gitignore file. Solution: Run Code2Prompt from the project root, or specify the .gitignore path with --gitignore.

  2. Issue: The generated output is too large for my AI model. Solution: Use --tokens to check the count, and refine --filter or --exclude options.

  3. Issue: Some files are not being processed. Solution: Check for binary files or exclusion patterns. Use --case-sensitive if needed.

Roadmap

  • Interractive filtering
  • Include system in template to promote re-usability of sub templates.
  • Tokens count for Anthropic Models and other models such LLama3 or Mistral
  • Cost Estimations for main LLM providers based in token count
  • Integration with qllm (Quantalogic LLM)
  • Embedding of file summary in SQL-Lite
  • Intelligence selection of file based on an LLM
  • Git power tools (Git diff integration / PR Assisted Review)

Contributing

Contributions to Code2Prompt are welcome! Please read our Contributing Guide for details on our code of conduct and the process for submitting pull requests.

License

Code2Prompt is released under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.


⭐ If you find Code2Prompt useful, please give us a star on GitHub! It helps us reach more developers and improve the tool. ⭐

Project Growth

Star History Chart

Made with ❤️ by Raphaël MANSUY. Founder of Quantalogic. Creator of qllm.

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