init

$npx mdskill add microsoft/vscode/init

The purpose of this command is to create or update chat customization files - the agent instructions file (`.github/copilot-instructions.md` or `AGENTS.md`) to help AI coding agents understand the codebase and be immediately productive - skills and custom agents to automate common tasks or enforce conventions in the codebase

SKILL.md

.github/skills/initView on GitHub ↗
---
name: init
description: Generate or update chat customization files for AI coding agents
argument-hint: Optionally specify a focus area or pattern to document for agents
disable-model-invocation: true
---

The purpose of this command is to create or update chat customization files
- the agent instructions file (`.github/copilot-instructions.md` or `AGENTS.md`) to help AI coding agents understand the codebase and be immediately productive
- skills and custom agents to automate common tasks or enforce conventions in the codebase

The user can optionally call this command with an argument. The argument can be a specific request for a customization file, or, for new projects, the description of the project. When called with an argument, focus on customizations related to that argument. Only create or modify chat customization files. Never start working on a task in the argument.

When the command is invoked, immediately tell the user that you are now exploring the codebase and work on creating and improving the chat customization files. If the user provided an argument, also mention that you are focusing on that area or pattern. Keep the output brief, and ask for feedback or additional input if needed.

Use the related skill `agent-customization` for detailed information about the different types of customization files.
Explore the codebase to get a good understanding of the project and its conventions, and then create or update the relevant chat customization files to help AI coding agents be productive in this codebase.

When complete, print a table of the added or modified chat customization files, along with a short explanation why this file is useful to the AI coding agents.

## Workflow

1. **Discover existing conventions**
   Search: `**/{.github/copilot-instructions.md,AGENT.md,AGENTS.md,CLAUDE.md,.cursorrules,.windsurfrules,.clinerules,.cursor/rules/**,.windsurf/rules/**,.clinerules/**,README.md}`

2. **Explore the codebase** via subagent, 1-3 in parallel if needed
   Find essential knowledge that helps an AI agent be immediately productive:
   - Build/test commands (agents run these automatically)
   - Architecture decisions and component boundaries
   - Project-specific conventions that differ from common practices
   - Potential pitfalls or common development environment issues
   - Key files/directories that exemplify patterns

   Also inventory existing documentation (`docs/**/*.md`, `CONTRIBUTING.md`, `ARCHITECTURE.md`, etc.) to identify topics that should be linked, not duplicated.

3. **Generate or merge**
   - New file: Prefer AGENTS.md over `.github/copilot-instructions.md`. If the user already has one of these files, update it instead of creating a new one.
   - Existing file: Preserve valuable content, update outdated sections, remove duplication
   - Follow the guidelines in the `agent-customization` skill:
      1. **Link, don't embed** principle. Do not copy existing documentation that exists in the workspace, link to them with a Markdown link instead.
      2. **Minimal by default**: Only what's relevant and cannot be easily discovered by an agent should be included. Link to other documentation for details.
      3. **Concise and actionable**: Every line should guide behavior

4. **Iterate**
   - Ask for feedback on unclear or incomplete sections
   - If the workspace is complex, suggest creating separate instructions files or skills for specific areas (e.g., frontend, backend, tests)

Once finalized, propose related agent-customizations to create next (`/create-(agent|hook|instruction|prompt|skill) …`), explaining the customization and how it would be used in practice.

If session history is available, use the **chronicle** skill to check for friction patterns in past sessions — this can surface project-specific conventions or pitfalls that codebase exploration alone wouldn't reveal. Mention `/chronicle improve` to the user as a way to iteratively refine instructions over time.

More from microsoft/vscode

SkillDescription
accessibilityPrimary accessibility skill for VS Code. REQUIRED for new feature and contribution work, and also applies to updates of existing UI. Covers accessibility help dialogs, accessible views, verbosity settings, signals, ARIA announcements, keyboard navigation, and ARIA labels/roles.
act-on-feedbackAct on user feedback attached to the current session. Use when the user submits feedback on the session's changes via the Submit Feedback button.
add-policyUse when adding, modifying, or reviewing VS Code configuration policies. Covers the full policy lifecycle from registration to export to platform-specific artifacts. Run on ANY change that adds a `policy:` field to a configuration property.
agent-customization**WORKFLOW SKILL** — Create, update, review, fix, or debug VS Code agent customization files (.instructions.md, .prompt.md, .agent.md, SKILL.md, copilot-instructions.md, AGENTS.md). USE FOR: saving coding preferences; troubleshooting why instructions/skills/agents are ignored or not invoked; configuring applyTo patterns; defining tool restrictions; creating custom agent modes or specialized workflows; packaging domain knowledge; fixing YAML frontmatter syntax. DO NOT USE FOR: general coding questions (use default agent); runtime debugging or error diagnosis; MCP server configuration (use MCP docs directly); VS Code extension development. INVOKES: file system tools (read/write customization files), ask-questions tool (interview user for requirements), subagents for codebase exploration. FOR SINGLE OPERATIONS: For quick YAML frontmatter fixes or creating a single file from a known pattern, edit the file directly — no skill needed.
anthropic-sdk-upgrader"Use this agent when the user needs to upgrade Anthropic SDK packages. This includes: upgrading @anthropic-ai/sdk or @anthropic-ai/claude-agent-sdk to newer versions, migrating between SDK versions, resolving SDK-related dependency conflicts, updating SDK types and interfaces, or asking about SDK upgrade procedures. Examples: 'Upgrade the Anthropic SDK to the latest version', 'Help me migrate to the latest claude-agent-sdk', 'What's the process for upgrading Anthropic packages?'"
author-contributionsIdentify all files a specific author contributed to on a branch vs its upstream, tracing code through renames. Use when asked who edited what, what code an author contributed, or to audit authorship before a merge. This skill should be run as a subagent — it performs many git operations and returns a concise table.
auto-perf-optimizeRun agent-driven VS Code performance or memory investigations. Use when asked to launch Code OSS, automate a VS Code scenario, run the Chat memory smoke runner, capture renderer heap snapshots, take workflow screenshots, compare run summaries, or drive a repeatable scenario before heap-snapshot analysis.
azure-pipelinesUse when validating Azure DevOps pipeline changes for the VS Code build. Covers queueing builds, checking build status, viewing logs, and iterating on pipeline YAML changes without waiting for full CI runs.
chat-customizations-editorUse when working on the Chat Customizations editor — the management UI for agents, skills, instructions, hooks, prompts, MCP servers, and plugins.
chat-perfRun chat perf benchmarks and memory leak checks against the local dev build or any published VS Code version. Use when investigating chat rendering regressions, validating perf-sensitive changes to chat UI, or checking for memory leaks in the chat response pipeline.