| name | ast-grep |
| description | Write, debug, and validate ast-grep structural code search rules. Use for syntax-aware code search, AST pattern matching, structural refactor discovery, or searches plain text tools like rg can miss — functions with particular descendants, calls inside specific contexts, decorators, or other Tree-sitter-backed structures. |
| version | 0.1.0 |
| category | developer-tools-integrations |
| tags | ["ast-grep","structural-search","code-search","tree-sitter","static-analysis","refactoring"] |
| argument-hint | [code-pattern-or-search-goal] [path] |
| allowed-tools | Read, Glob, Grep, Bash, Write |
ast-grep Structural Search
Use ast-grep when the user needs code structure, not just text. The useful
outcome is a validated rule plus a clear statement of what it matches and what
it may miss.
Triage
Start with the smallest tool that can answer the question.
- Use
rg for exact names, strings, comments, or simple text.
- Use language tooling for semantic facts such as type resolution, references,
imports, or rename safety.
- Use ast-grep for syntax shape: descendants, ancestors, call forms, decorators,
missing constructs, nested contexts, or multi-language structural searches.
If ast-grep is not installed, say so and offer an rg fallback only when the
fallback will not pretend to be structural.
Workflow
-
Identify the language and target files.
- Infer from paths and extensions when possible.
- Ask only if the language or include/exclude scope cannot be inferred.
-
Write a tiny fixture before searching the real repository.
- Include at least one positive example.
- Add a negative example when false positives would be costly.
-
Start with the simplest pattern.
- Use
ast-grep run --pattern ... --lang ... for a single-node search.
- Move to a YAML rule when the search needs
has, inside, not, any,
all, regex, nthChild, or reusable metadata.
-
Debug the parsed structure when the first rule misses.
- Use
ast-grep run --pattern '<sample code>' --lang <lang> --debug-query=ast.
--debug-query prints diagnostic output and may exit non-zero; treat the
printed tree as useful debug output, not as a failed repository search.
-
Validate on the fixture before running on the repository.
- Keep the rule as simple as possible until it matches the fixture.
- Then scan the real path and report expected false-negative boundaries.
-
Report the final rule, command, and caveats.
- Name node kinds or language constructs intentionally excluded.
- Prefer JSON output when a downstream script will consume matches.
Rule File First
Rule files avoid most shell quoting problems and are the preferred form for
complex searches.
On Windows, save rule files as UTF-8 without BOM. If ast-grep scan --rule
reports missing field language even though the YAML has language, check for
a BOM at the start of the file.
id: async-await
language: javascript
rule:
any:
- kind: function_declaration
- kind: arrow_function
- kind: method_definition
has:
pattern: await $EXPR
stopBy: end
$rule = @'
id: async-await
language: javascript
rule:
any:
- kind: function_declaration
- kind: arrow_function
- kind: method_definition
has:
pattern: await $EXPR
stopBy: end
'@
[System.IO.File]::WriteAllText(
"async-await.yml",
$rule,
[System.Text.UTF8Encoding]::new($false)
)
ast-grep scan --rule async-await.yml .\src
ast-grep scan --rule async-await.yml .\src --json
ast-grep scan --rule async-await.yml ./src
ast-grep scan --rule async-await.yml ./src --json
Inline Smoke Tests
Use inline rules only for quick checks. In PowerShell, single-quoted here-strings
preserve $META variables without escaping.
$rule = @'
id: console-call
language: javascript
rule:
pattern: console.log($$$ARGS)
'@
"console.log('debug', value);" | ast-grep scan --inline-rules $rule --stdin
In POSIX shells, quote the YAML with single quotes or escape $.
printf '%s\n' "console.log('debug', value);" |
ast-grep scan --inline-rules 'id: console-call
language: javascript
rule:
pattern: console.log($$$ARGS)' --stdin
Every scan --inline-rules example must include id, language, and rule.
Debugging Checklist
When a rule produces no matches:
- Confirm the language:
--lang javascript is different from --lang tsx.
- Print the query tree with
--debug-query=ast or --debug-query=cst.
- Check that rule files are UTF-8 without BOM.
- Replace the complex rule with one
pattern or one kind.
- Add relational rules back one at a time.
- Add
stopBy: end to deep has / inside searches.
- Check whether metavariables occupy a whole syntax node.
- Broaden node kinds if the language has several forms of the same concept.
Avoid Silent False Negatives
Do not assume one node kind covers a user concept.
For JavaScript and TypeScript, "function" may include:
function_declaration
function
arrow_function
method_definition
- class fields or object properties containing functions
For React, decide whether the user means .js, .jsx, .ts, or .tsx.
For Python, inspect the parsed shape before relying on indentation-sensitive
multi-line patterns.
Output Contract
When answering an ast-grep task, include:
Rule: the YAML rule or inline pattern.
Validation: the fixture command you used or recommend.
Repository command: the command for the user's target path.
Caveats: likely false positives, false negatives, and language forms not
covered.
Reference
Load references/rule_reference.md when the task needs detailed syntax for
atomic rules, relational rules, composite rules, metavariables, or troubleshooting.