Skip to main content

Custom instructions when using GitHub Copilot

Last week when talking about a new release of the JetBrains AI assistant, I noticed a specific feature I really liked; the prompt library. This allows you to tweak the prompts that are used in specific contexts.

This made me wonder, does a similar feature exists for GitHub Copilot? Let’s find out…

Custom instructions(preview)

For GitHub Copilot, a similar feature is in preview; Custom Instructions. With custom instructions you can provide extra context that will be added to your conversations so that Copilot can generate higher quality responses.

To use this feature, we first need to enable it because it is still in preview. I’ll show you how to this using Visual Studio(check the link at the bottom of this post to see the instructions for VS Code).

  • Open Visual Studio (make sure you have the latest version installed)
  • Go to Tools  -> Options
  • Search for custom instructions
  • Select the checkbox for (Preview) Enable custom instructions to be loaded from .github/copilot-instructions.md files and added to requests.

Now that the feature is enabled, we can use it by creating a copilot-instructions.md file in a .github folder at the root of our repository.

Here is an example I created:

If I now ask Copilot a question, my instructions are taken into account:

 



More information

Adding custom instructions for GitHub Copilot - GitHub Docs

JetBrains AI Assistent–Ollama support

Master Copilot Your Way: Unlocking the Power of Copilot Instructions in Visual Studio!

Popular posts from this blog

Kubernetes–Limit your environmental impact

Reducing the carbon footprint and CO2 emission of our (cloud) workloads, is a responsibility of all of us. If you are running a Kubernetes cluster, have a look at Kube-Green . kube-green is a simple Kubernetes operator that automatically shuts down (some of) your pods when you don't need them. A single pod produces about 11 Kg CO2eq per year( here the calculation). Reason enough to give it a try! Installing kube-green in your cluster The easiest way to install the operator in your cluster is through kubectl. We first need to install a cert-manager: kubectl apply -f https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/v1.14.5/cert-manager.yaml Remark: Wait a minute before you continue as it can take some time before the cert-manager is up & running inside your cluster. Now we can install the kube-green operator: kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kube-green/kube-green/releases/latest/download/kube-green.yaml Now in the namespace where we want t...

Azure DevOps/ GitHub emoji

I’m really bad at remembering emoji’s. So here is cheat sheet with all emoji’s that can be used in tools that support the github emoji markdown markup: All credits go to rcaviers who created this list.

.NET 9 - Goodbye sln!

Although the csproj file evolved and simplified a lot over time, the Visual Studio solution file (.sln) remained an ugly file format full of magic GUIDs. With the latest .NET 9 SDK(9.0.200), we finally got an alternative; a new XML-based solution file(.slnx) got introduced in preview. So say goodbye to this ugly sln file: And meet his better looking slnx brother instead: To use this feature we first have to enable it: Go to Tools -> Options -> Environment -> Preview Features Check the checkbox next to Use Solution File Persistence Model Now we can migrate an existing sln file to slnx using the following command: dotnet sln migrate AICalculator.sln .slnx file D:\Projects\Test\AICalculator\AICalculator.slnx generated. Or create a new Visual Studio solution using the slnx format: dotnet new sln --format slnx The template "Solution File" was created successfully. The new format is not yet recognized by VSCode but it does work in Jetbr...
OSZAR »