# CLAUDE.md This file provides guidance to Claude Code (claude.ai/code) when working with code in this repository. ## Common Development Commands ### Development Server - `bin/dev` - Start development server (Rails, Sidekiq, Tailwind CSS watcher) - `bin/rails server` - Start Rails server only - `bin/rails console` - Open Rails console ### Testing - `bin/rails test` - Run all tests - `bin/rails test:db` - Run tests with database reset - `bin/rails test:system` - Run system tests only (use sparingly - they take longer) - `bin/rails test test/models/account_test.rb` - Run specific test file - `bin/rails test test/models/account_test.rb:42` - Run specific test at line ### Linting & Formatting - `bin/rubocop` - Run Ruby linter - `npm run lint` - Check JavaScript/TypeScript code - `npm run lint:fix` - Fix JavaScript/TypeScript issues - `npm run format` - Format JavaScript/TypeScript code - `bin/brakeman` - Run security analysis ### Database - `bin/rails db:prepare` - Create and migrate database - `bin/rails db:migrate` - Run pending migrations - `bin/rails db:rollback` - Rollback last migration - `bin/rails db:seed` - Load seed data ### Setup - `bin/setup` - Initial project setup (installs dependencies, prepares database) ## Pre-Pull Request CI Workflow ALWAYS run these commands before opening a pull request: 1. **Tests** (Required): - `bin/rails test` - Run all tests (always required) - `bin/rails test:system` - Run system tests (only when applicable, they take longer) 2. **Linting** (Required): - `bin/rubocop -f github -a` - Ruby linting with auto-correct - `bundle exec erb_lint ./app/**/*.erb -a` - ERB linting with auto-correct 3. **Security** (Required): - `bin/brakeman --no-pager` - Security analysis Only proceed with pull request creation if ALL checks pass. ## General Development Rules ### Authentication Context - Use `Current.user` for the current user. Do NOT use `current_user`. - Use `Current.family` for the current family. Do NOT use `current_family`. ### Development Guidelines - Prior to generating any code, carefully read the project conventions and guidelines - Ignore i18n methods and files. Hardcode strings in English for now to optimize speed of development - Do not run `rails server` in your responses - Do not run `touch tmp/restart.txt` - Do not run `rails credentials` - Do not automatically run migrations ## High-Level Architecture ### Application Modes The Maybe app runs in two distinct modes: - **Managed**: The Maybe team operates and manages servers for users (Rails.application.config.app_mode = "managed") - **Self Hosted**: Users host the Maybe app on their own infrastructure, typically through Docker Compose (Rails.application.config.app_mode = "self_hosted") ### Core Domain Model The application is built around financial data management with these key relationships: - **User** → has many **Accounts** → has many **Transactions** - **Account** types: checking, savings, credit cards, investments, crypto, loans, properties - **Transaction** → belongs to **Category**, can have **Tags** and **Rules** - **Investment accounts** → have **Holdings** → track **Securities** via **Trades** ### API Architecture The application provides both internal and external APIs: - Internal API: Controllers serve JSON via Turbo for SPA-like interactions - External API: `/api/v1/` namespace with Doorkeeper OAuth and API key authentication - API responses use Jbuilder templates for JSON rendering - Rate limiting via Rack Attack with configurable limits per API key ### Sync & Import System Two primary data ingestion methods: 1. **Plaid Integration**: Real-time bank account syncing - `PlaidItem` manages connections - `Sync` tracks sync operations - Background jobs handle data updates 2. **CSV Import**: Manual data import with mapping - `Import` manages import sessions - Supports transaction and balance imports - Custom field mapping with transformation rules ### Background Processing Sidekiq handles asynchronous tasks: - Account syncing (`SyncAccountsJob`) - Import processing (`ImportDataJob`) - AI chat responses (`CreateChatResponseJob`) - Scheduled maintenance via sidekiq-cron ### Frontend Architecture - **Hotwire Stack**: Turbo + Stimulus for reactive UI without heavy JavaScript - **ViewComponents**: Reusable UI components in `app/components/` - **Stimulus Controllers**: Handle interactivity, organized alongside components - **Charts**: D3.js for financial visualizations (time series, donut, sankey) - **Styling**: Tailwind CSS v4.x with custom design system - Design system defined in `app/assets/tailwind/maybe-design-system.css` - Always use functional tokens (e.g., `text-primary` not `text-white`) - Prefer semantic HTML elements over JS components - Use `icon` helper for icons, never `lucide_icon` directly ### Multi-Currency Support - All monetary values stored in base currency (user's primary currency) - Exchange rates fetched from Synth API - `Money` objects handle currency conversion and formatting - Historical exchange rates for accurate reporting ### Security & Authentication - Session-based auth for web users - API authentication via: - OAuth2 (Doorkeeper) for third-party apps - API keys with JWT tokens for direct API access - Scoped permissions system for API access - Strong parameters and CSRF protection throughout ### Testing Philosophy - Comprehensive test coverage using Rails' built-in Minitest - Fixtures for test data (avoid FactoryBot) - Keep fixtures minimal (2-3 per model for base cases) - VCR for external API testing - System tests for critical user flows (use sparingly) - Test helpers in `test/support/` for common scenarios - Only test critical code paths that significantly increase confidence - Write tests as you go, when required ### Performance Considerations - Database queries optimized with proper indexes - N+1 queries prevented via includes/joins - Background jobs for heavy operations - Caching strategies for expensive calculations - Turbo Frames for partial page updates ### Development Workflow - Feature branches merged to `main` - Docker support for consistent environments - Environment variables via `.env` files - Lookbook for component development (`/lookbook`) - Letter Opener for email preview in development ## Project Conventions ### Convention 1: Minimize Dependencies - Push Rails to its limits before adding new dependencies - Strong technical/business reason required for new dependencies - Favor old and reliable over new and flashy ### Convention 2: Skinny Controllers, Fat Models - Business logic in `app/models/` folder, avoid `app/services/` - Use Rails concerns and POROs for organization - Models should answer questions about themselves: `account.balance_series` not `AccountSeries.new(account).call` ### Convention 3: Hotwire-First Frontend - **Native HTML preferred over JS components** - Use `` for modals, `
` for disclosures - **Leverage Turbo frames** for page sections over client-side solutions - **Query params for state** over localStorage/sessions - **Server-side formatting** for currencies, numbers, dates - **Always use `icon` helper** in `application_helper.rb`, NEVER `lucide_icon` directly ### Convention 4: Optimize for Simplicity - Prioritize good OOP domain design over performance - Focus performance only on critical/global areas (avoid N+1 queries, mindful of global layouts) ### Convention 5: Database vs ActiveRecord Validations - Simple validations (null checks, unique indexes) in DB - ActiveRecord validations for convenience in forms (prefer client-side when possible) - Complex validations and business logic in ActiveRecord ## TailwindCSS Design System ### Design System Rules - **Always reference `app/assets/tailwind/maybe-design-system.css`** for primitives and tokens - **Use functional tokens** defined in design system: - `text-primary` instead of `text-white` - `bg-container` instead of `bg-white` - `border border-primary` instead of `border border-gray-200` - **NEVER create new styles** in design system files without permission - **Always generate semantic HTML** ## Component Architecture ### ViewComponent vs Partials Decision Making **Use ViewComponents when:** - Element has complex logic or styling patterns - Element will be reused across multiple views/contexts - Element needs structured styling with variants/sizes - Element requires interactive behavior or Stimulus controllers - Element has configurable slots or complex APIs - Element needs accessibility features or ARIA support **Use Partials when:** - Element is primarily static HTML with minimal logic - Element is used in only one or few specific contexts - Element is simple template content - Element doesn't need variants, sizes, or complex configuration - Element is more about content organization than reusable functionality **Component Guidelines:** - Prefer components over partials when available - Keep domain logic OUT of view templates - Logic belongs in component files, not template files ### Stimulus Controller Guidelines **Declarative Actions (Required):** ```erb
``` **Controller Best Practices:** - Keep controllers lightweight and simple (< 7 targets) - Use private methods and expose clear public API - Single responsibility or highly related responsibilities - Component controllers stay in component directory, global controllers in `app/javascript/controllers/` - Pass data via `data-*-value` attributes, not inline JavaScript ## Testing Philosophy ### General Testing Rules - **ALWAYS use Minitest + fixtures** (NEVER RSpec or factories) - Keep fixtures minimal (2-3 per model for base cases) - Create edge cases on-the-fly within test context - Use Rails helpers for large fixture creation needs ### Test Quality Guidelines - **Write minimal, effective tests** - system tests sparingly - **Only test critical and important code paths** - **Test boundaries correctly:** - Commands: test they were called with correct params - Queries: test output - Don't test implementation details of other classes ### Testing Examples ```ruby # GOOD - Testing critical domain business logic test "syncs balances" do Holding::Syncer.any_instance.expects(:sync_holdings).returns([]).once assert_difference "@account.balances.count", 2 do Balance::Syncer.new(@account, strategy: :forward).sync_balances end end # BAD - Testing ActiveRecord functionality test "saves balance" do balance_record = Balance.new(balance: 100, currency: "USD") assert balance_record.save end ``` ### Stubs and Mocks - Use `mocha` gem - Prefer `OpenStruct` for mock instances - Only mock what's necessary