- Commands
- Chat
- Search
- Autocomplete
- Verify that the option to run the
Explain Code
command is available in the following locations:- Sidebar
Explain Code
- Context (right-click) menu
Cody > Explain Code
- Command palette (MetaKey+Shift+p)
Cody Command: Explain Code
- Cody Command Menu (option+c,
Explain Code
)
- Sidebar
- Highlight a section of code in a file.
- Run the
Explain Code
command. - Verify that Cody provides an explanation of the selected code in a new chat window.
- Move your cursor inside a function in the file without highlighting code, before running the
Explain Code
command again. - Verify that Cody provides an explanation of the function that contains your cursor in a new chat window.
- Verify that the chat executed by running the command is added to the sidebar under
Chats > Today
.
- Verify that the option to run the
Edit Code
command is available from the sidebar, right-click menu, the command palette (option+c, /edit), or Option+K keyboard shortcut. - Highlight a section of code.
- Run the
Edit Code
command with instructions for how Cody should edit the selected code. - Verify that Cody automatically applies edits to the selected code, per the user’s instructions.
- Verify that there is a notification that "Cody is working..." while edits are being applied.
- Verify that you can see a list of code lenses with a Cody icon above the generated code:
Show diff
,Accept
,Retry
, andUndo
. - Verify that you can see a diff view of the edit in a new tab by clicking
Show diff
. - Verify that you can prompt Cody to retry the command by clicking
Retry
and entering new instructions. - Verify that you can undo the edit by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
.
- Highlight a section of code.
- Trigger the Edit shortcut with Option+K
- Try to add a file to the Edit instruction, by using "@" and searching for a file
- Try to add a symbol to the Edit instruction, by using "@#" and searching for a symbol
- Try to change the range of the Edit, by selecting "Range". Check that navigating through the options correctly updates the range shown in the editor.
- Try to change the model of the Edit, by selecting "Model".
- Submit edits after changing the above values, and check that the Edit performs correctly (e.g. uses correct range, uses correct context)
- Verify that the selected configuration is shown in the input after clicking "Retry" on a completed edit.
- Verify that you can still change the configuration shown in the input after clicking "Retry" on a completed edit.
- Move the cursor to an empty line, do not highlight any selection.
- Verify that the option to run the
Edit Code
command is available from the sidebar, right-click menu, the command palette (option+c, /edit), or Option+K keyboard shortcut. - Run the
Edit Code
command with instructions for what Cody should generate. - Verify that there is a notification that "Cody is working..." while code is being generated.
- Verify that, per the user’s instructions, Cody automatically streams the generated code into the document, line-by-line.
- Verify that you can see a diff view of the edit in a new tab by clicking
Show diff
. - Verify that you can prompt Cody to retry the command by clicking
Retry
and entering new instructions. - Verify that you can undo the edit by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
.
- Verify that the option to run the
Generate Unit Tests
command is available in the following locations:- Sidebar
Generate Unit Tests
- Context (right-click) menu
Cody > Generate Unit Tests
- Command palette (MetaKey+Shift+p)
Cody Command: Generate Unit Tests
- Cody Command Menu (option+c,
/test
)
- Sidebar
- Highlight a section of code in a file that does not have any test files created.
- Run the
Generate Unit Tests
command. - Verify that an icon appears above the highlighted code with "Cody is working..." while Cody generates the tests.
- Verify that a new unsaved file is created and opened.
- Verify that Cody automatically streams the generated tests to the new file.
- Verify that you can remove the generated tests by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
.
- Verify that the option to run the
Document Code
command is available in the following locations:- Sidebar
Document Code
- Context (right-click) menu
Cody > Document Code
- Command palette (MetaKey+Shift+p)
Cody Command: Document Code
- Cody Command Menu (option+c,
Document Code
)
- Sidebar
- Highlight a section of code in a file.
- Run the
Document Code
command. - Verify that an icon appears above the highlighted code with "Cody is working..." while Cody generates documentation.
- Verify that you can see a diff view of the generated documentation in a new tab by clicking
Show diff
. - Verify that you can prompt Cody to retry the command by clicking
Retry
and entering new instructions. - Verify that you can undo the documentation by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
. - Move your cursor inside a function in the file without highlighting code, before running the
Document Code
command again. - Verify that Cody adds documentation above the function that contains your cursor.
- Verify that the option to run the
Find Code Smells
command is available in the following locations:- Sidebar
Find Code Smells
- Context (right-click) menu
Cody > Find Code Smells
- Command palette (MetaKey+Shift+p)
Cody Command: Find Code Smells
- Cody Command Menu (option+c,
Find Code Smells
)
- Sidebar
- Highlight a section of code in a file.
- Run the
Find Code Smells
command. - Verify that Cody provides suggestion for how to improve the selected code in a new chat window.
- Move your cursor inside a function in the file without highlighting code, before running the
Find Code Smells
command again - Verify that Cody provides suggestion for how to improve the function that contains your cursor in a new chat window.
- Verify that the chat executed by running the command is added to the sidebar under
Chats
.
- Deliberately break a line or section of code to trigger the IDE’s red squiggly error warning.
- Click the Code Action (in VSC) lightbulb icon in the project file
- Select
Ask Cody to Fix
. - Verify that there is a notification that "Cody is working..." while edits are being applied.
- Verify that Cody automatically applies a code fix to the selected code.
- Verify that you can see a diff view of the fix in a new tab by clicking
Show diff
. - Verify that you can prompt Cody to retry the command by clicking
Retry
and entering new instructions. - Verify that you can undo the fix by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
.
- Deliberately break a line or section of code to trigger the IDE’s red squiggly error warning.
- Click the Code Action lightbulb icon in the project file
- Select
Ask Cody to Explain
. - Verify that Cody provides an explanation of the error in a new chat window.
- Verify that the chat executed by running the command appears in the chat list in the left hand panel.
- Highlight a section of code.
- Click the Code Action lightbulb icon in the project file
- Select
Cody: Edit Code
. - Provide instructions for how Cody should edit the selected code.
- Verify that there is a notification that "Cody is working..." while edits are being applied.
- Verify that Cody automatically applies edits to the selected code, per the user’s instructions
- Verify that you can see a diff view of the edit in a new tab by clicking
Show diff
. - Verify that you can prompt Cody to retry the command by clicking
Retry
and entering new instructions. - Verify that you can undo the edit by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
.
- Move the cursor to an empty line, do not highlight any selection.
- Click the Code Action lightbulb icon in the project file.
- Select
Cody: Generate Code
. - Provide instructions for what Cody should generate.
- Verify that there is a notification that "Cody is working..." while code is being generated.
- Verify that, per the user’s instructions, Cody automatically streams the generated code into the document, line-by-line.
- Verify that you can see a diff view of the edit in a new tab by clicking
Show diff
. - Verify that you can prompt Cody to retry the command by clicking
Retry
and entering new instructions. - Verify that you can undo the edit by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
.
- Move the cursor to an active symbol that could be documented (e.g. a function name), do not highlight any selection.
- Click the Code Action lightbulb icon in the project file.
- Select
Cody: Generate Documentation for symbolName
. - Verify that there is a notification that "Cody is working..." while code is being generated.
- Verify that Cody automatically applies documentation to the selected symbol, per the user’s instructions
- Verify that you can see a diff view of the edit in a new tab by clicking
Show diff
. - Verify that you can prompt Cody to retry the command by clicking
Retry
and entering new instructions. - Verify that you can undo the edit by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
.
- Move the cursor to an active symbol that could be documented (e.g. a function name), do not highlight any selection.
- Click the Code Action lightbulb icon in the project file.
- Select
Cody: Generate Tests for symbolName
. - Verify that there is a notification: "Cody is working..." while command is being processed.
- Verify that Cody opens a new file, and automatically streams the generated tests into said file, line-by-line.
- Verify that there is a notification: "Generating Tests..." while the output is beign produced
- Verify that you can undo the edit by clicking
Undo
. - Verify that the ghost text disappears by clicking
Accept
.
- In your command palette, search for
Cody Command: Custom Commands
to open the Custom Command Menu. - Select
Configure Custom Commands
. - Select
New Custom Command
. - Enter the title of a new custom command (e.g.,
correct
) and press enter. - Verify that you cannot use a title that already exists.
- Enter the instructions that Cody should follow (e.g.,
Correct any spelling mistakes
). - Select the context that Cody should use with the instructions (e.g.,
selection
). - Choose where to save the command (
User Settings
orWorkspace Settings
). - Click the
Custom Commands
command in the Cody sidebar to open the Custom Command Menu. - Verify
correct
command shows up in the menu.
- Click on
Custom Commands
in the Cody sidebar to open the Custom Command Menu. - Select “Configure Custom Commands”.
- Select “Open User Settings (JSON)”.
- Add a new user custom command:
{
"commands": {
"summarize": {
"prompt": "Summarize the share context in 3-5 sentences",
"context": {
"currentFile": true
}
}
}
}
- Click on
Custom Commands
in the Cody sidebar to open the Custom Command Menu. - Select “Configure Custom Commands”.
- Select “Open Workspace Settings (JSON)”.
- Add a new workspace custom command:
{
"commands": {
"checker": {
"prompt": "Check for spelling mistakes in the share context",
"context": {
"selection": true
}
}
}
}
- Click on
Custom Commands
in the Cody sidebar to open the Custom Command Menu. - Verify
summarize
andchecker
are available in the menu. - Select the newly created commands to run the custom command.
- Verify the responses show up in a new chat window and the responses align with the prompt of the commands. (E.g., for the
summarize
command above, you should see Cody summarize the current file in the output).
- Verify that you can open a new chat window by selecting
New Chat
in theCommands
left hand panel, hovering over the header in theChats
left hand panel, or with the option+/ keyboard shortcut. - Ask Cody a question in the chat window. The question should include a request for Cody to generate code.
- Verify that Cody has a loading state when generating a response.
- Verify that you can stop Cody from continuing to generate a response.
- Verify that you can select options to insert the code at the cursor in the file, copy the code to your clipboard, or create a new file containing the generated code.
- Verify that you can ask Cody a follow-up question within the same chat window and that Cody will generate a response.
- Verify that you can edit a previous chat prompt and get a new answer from Cody.
- Verify that you can delete all chats by hovering over the header in the “Chats” panel and selecting the trashcan icon.
- Verify that you can delete an individual chat by hovering over an individual chat in the “Chats” panel and selecting the trashcan icon.
- Verify that you can start a new chat by hovering over the header in the “Chats” panel and selecting the speech bubble icon.
- Verify that all new chats appear as a list in the “Chats” panel and that they persist across sessions.
- Verify that selecting an individual chat within the “Chats” panel opens up the chat in a new window and that the conversation has persisted.
- Open a chat window and select the "Enhanced Context" icon next to the chat input.
- Verify that "Enhanced Context" is enabled by default.
Set up steps:
- Clone a git repository, for example
git clone [email protected]:react/react.git
- Open VSCode in that folder:
cd react; code .
- Sign in as a Free or Pro user.
Tests:
- Verify that you have the ability to generate embeddings: Start a new chat, click the Enhanced Context Selector, click
Enable embeddings
. - Verify that embeddings progress indicator appears and the process completes successfully.
- In a new chat window, select the "Enhanced Context" icon, disable enhanced context, submit a question in the chat input, and verify that Cody did not use any code context to generate an answer.
- Enable "Enhanced Context" and verify that Cody used code files as context.
- At the top of the chat transcript, use the arrow dropdown to display the code that Cody used as context.
- From the list of files that Cody used as context, select one of the
@
files and verify that the correct file opens in a new tab at the correct line number. - In the chat input, verify that typing
@
suggests files to add as context, and selecting Symbols and then typing a symbol name suggests symbols to add as context. - Verify that you can use a relative file path to choose a file to add as context (e.g.,
src/util/my-file
).
Prerequisites:
- An Enterprise endpoint
- Enterprise credentials
- Some git repositories indexed by the enterprise.
Set up steps:
- Clone two git repositories which are indexed by the enterprise.
- Open VSCode and add both repositories to your workspace. (File, Add Folder to Workspace)
- Sign in as an Enterprise user.
Tests:
- Start a chat and verify the repositories you cloned appear in the enhanced context selector.
- Click Choose Repositories and verify that a repository list loads and you can select up to 9 repositories.
- In the Enhanced Context Selector, verify that you can remove repositories by clicking on the X. (The first repository cannot be removed.)
- Chat, expand the context sources list, and verify that multiple (10+) context items appear mentioning some of the chosen repositories.
- Verify that clicking on the context sources open the web browser; the relevant code is highlighted.
- Sign in as a Free user, open a new chat, and verify that the default LLM is Claude 2, and there is no option to switch LLMs (without upgrading to Pro).
- Sign in as a Pro user and verify that there is a list of LLM options and you can switch between them.
- Sign in as an enterprise user and verify that you cannot change the LLM.
Primary languages to test: Javascript, Typescript, TypescriptReact, Python, Go
- Log in to the VS Code extension as a Free user.
- Generate a completion using the manual-trigger key binding.
- Verify that the completion is generated at the current cursor position.
- Log in to the VS Code extension as a Free user.
- Generate completion for file in the X programming language.
- Open VS Code settings, find the language ignore list, and add this language to the list
- Verify that completions are no longer generated for this language.
- Log in to the VS Code extension as a Free user.
- Generate completion using the LLM selected by default.
- Open VS Code settings and find Cody autocomplete mode settings.
- Combinations to test:
- Provider: fireworks; Model: starcoder-16 and starcoder-7b
- Provider: anthropic; Model: null
- Combinations to test:
- Verify that autocomplete works as expected after the settings change.
- Open a TypeScript file. Paste in something like this:
function bubbleSort(
. - Expect more than one line of code being completed for you.
- Open the Autocomplete Trace View (cmd+shift+p “trace view”)
- In another editor tab, trigger an autocomplete request.
- Expect the number of shown/accepted completions to update accordingly.