VectorCode
VectorCodeは、コードリポジトリのインデックス作成ツールであり、コーディングLLMのためのより良いプロンプトを構築するのに役立ちます。Neovimプラグインも含まれており、AIプラグインの構築や強化のためのAPIを提供します。現在ベータ版であり、改善の余地があります。
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VectorCode
VectorCode is a code repository indexing tool. It helps you build better prompt
for your coding LLMs by indexing and providing information about the code
repository you're working on. This repository also contains the corresponding
neovim plugin that provides a set of APIs for you to build or enhance AI plugins,
and integrations for some of the popular plugins.
[!NOTE]
This project is in beta quality and is undergoing rapid iterations.
I know there are plenty of rooms for improvements, and any help is welcomed.
Why VectorCode?
LLMs usually have very limited understanding about close-source projects, projects
that are not well-known, and cutting edge developments that have not made it into
releases. Their capabilities on these projects are quite limited. With
VectorCode, you can easily (and programmatically) inject task-relevant context
from the project into the prompt. This significantly improves the quality of the
model output and reduce hallucination.
Documentation
[!NOTE]
The documentation on themain
branch reflects the code on the latest commit.
To check for the documentation for the version you're using, you can check out
the corresponding tags.
- For the setup and usage of the command-line tool, see the CLI documentation;
- For neovim users, after you've gone through the CLI documentation, please refer to
the neovim plugin documentation (and optionally the lua API reference)
for further instructions. - Additional resources:
- the wiki for extra tricks and
tips that will help you get the most out of VectorCode; - the discussions where
you can ask general questions and share your cool usages about VectorCode. - If you're feeling adanvturous, feel free to check out
the pull requests for
WIP features.
- the wiki for extra tricks and
If you're trying to contribute to this project, take a look at the contribution
guide, which contains information about some basic
guidelines that you should follow and tips that you may find helpful.
About Versioning
This project follows an adapted semantic versioning:
- Until 1.0.0 is released, the major version number stays 0 which indicates that
this project is still in early stage, and features/interfaces may change from
time to time; - The minor version number indicates breaking changes. When I decide to remove a
feature/config option, the actual removal will happen when I bump the minor
version number. Therefore, if you want to avoid breaking a working setup, you
may choose to use a version constraint like"vectorcode<0.7.0"
; - The patch version number indicates non-breaking changes. This can include new
features and bug fixes. When I decide to deprecate things, I will make a new
release with bumped patch version. Until the minor version number is bumped,
the deprecated feature will still work but you'll see a warning. It's
recommended to update your setup to adapt the new features.
TODOs
- query by
file pathexcluded paths; - chunking support;
- add metadata for files;
- chunk-size configuration;
- smarter chunking (semantics/syntax based), implemented with
py-tree-sitter and
tree-sitter-language-pack; - configurable document selection from query results.
-
NeoVim Lua API with cache to skip the retrieval when a project has notReturns empty array instead;
been indexed - job pool for async caching;
- persistent-client;
- proper remote Chromadb support (with authentication, etc.);
- respect
.gitignore
; - implement some sort of project-root anchors (such as
.git
or a custom.vectorcode.json
) that enhances automatic project-root detection.
Implemented project-level.vectorcode/
and.git
as root anchor - ability to view and delete files in a collection;
- joint search (kinda, using codecompanion.nvim/MCP);
- Nix support (unofficial packages here);
- Query rewriting (#124).
Credit
- @milanglacier (and minuet-ai.nvim) for the support when this project was still in early stage;
- @olimorris for the help (personally and
from codecompanion.nvim)
when this project made initial attempts at tool-calling; - @ravitemer for the help to interface
VectorCode with MCP; - The nix community (especially @sarahec and @GaetanLepage)
for maintaining the nix packages.