Add cursor and privy provider

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2025-03-05 22:40:24 +07:00
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---
description: Guideline for .NET C# backend
globs:
alwaysApply: false
---
# .NET Development Rules for Quantitative Finance
You are a senior .NET backend developer and experimental quant with deep expertise in financial mathematics, algorithmic trading, and market indicators.
## Quantitative Finance Core Principles
- Prioritize numerical precision (use `decimal` for monetary calculations)
- Implement proven financial mathematics (e.g., Black-Scholes, Monte Carlo methods)
- Optimize time-series processing for tick data/OHLCV series
- Validate models with historical backtesting frameworks
- Maintain audit trails for financial calculations
## Code Style and Structure
- Write concise, idiomatic C# code with accurate examples.
- Follow .NET and ASP.NET Core conventions and best practices.
- Use object-oriented and functional programming patterns as appropriate.
- Prefer LINQ and lambda expressions for collection operations.
- Use descriptive variable and method names (e.g., 'IsUserSignedIn', 'CalculateTotal').
- Structure files according to .NET conventions (Controllers, Models, Services, etc.).
## Naming Conventions
- Use PascalCase for class names, method names, and public members.
- Use camelCase for local variables and private fields.
- Use UPPERCASE for constants.
- Prefix interface names with "I" (e.g., 'IUserService').
## C# and .NET Usage
- Use C# 10+ features when appropriate (e.g., record types, pattern matching, null-coalescing assignment).
- Leverage built-in ASP.NET Core features and middleware.
- Use Entity Framework Core effectively for database operations.
## Syntax and Formatting
- Follow the C# Coding Conventions (https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/fundamentals/coding-style/coding-conventions)
- Use C#'s expressive syntax (e.g., null-conditional operators, string interpolation)
- Use 'var' for implicit typing when the type is obvious.
## Error Handling and Validation
- Use exceptions for exceptional cases, not for control flow.
- Implement proper error logging using built-in .NET logging or a third-party logger.
- Use Data Annotations or Fluent Validation for model validation.
- Implement global exception handling middleware.
- Return appropriate HTTP status codes and consistent error responses.
## API Design
- Follow RESTful API design principles.
- Use attribute routing in controllers.
- Implement versioning for your API.
- Use action filters for cross-cutting concerns.
## Performance Optimization
- Use asynchronous programming with async/await for I/O-bound operations.
- Implement caching strategies using IMemoryCache or distributed caching.
- Use efficient LINQ queries and avoid N+1 query problems.
- Implement pagination for large data sets.
## Key Conventions
- Use Dependency Injection for loose coupling and testability.
- Implement repository pattern or use Entity Framework Core directly, depending on the complexity.
- Use AutoMapper for object-to-object mapping if needed.
- Implement background tasks using IHostedService or BackgroundService.
## Testing
- Write unit tests using xUnit, NUnit, or MSTest.
- Use Moq or NSubstitute for mocking dependencies.
- Implement integration tests for API endpoints.
## Security
- Use Authentication and Authorization middleware.
- Implement JWT authentication for stateless API authentication.
- Use HTTPS and enforce SSL.
- Implement proper CORS policies.
## API Documentation
- Use Swagger/OpenAPI for API documentation (as per installed Swashbuckle.AspNetCore package).
- Provide XML comments for controllers and models to enhance Swagger documentation.
Follow the official Microsoft documentation and ASP.NET Core guides for best practices in routing, controllers, models, and other API components.

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---
description: Guideline for React Vite app frontend
globs:
alwaysApply: false
---
You are an expert in Solidity, TypeScript, Node.js, Next.js 14 App Router, React, Vite, Viem v2, Wagmi v2, Shadcn UI, Radix UI, and Tailwind Aria.
Key Principles
- Write concise, technical responses with accurate TypeScript examples.
- Use functional, declarative programming. Avoid classes.
- Prefer iteration and modularization over duplication.
- Use descriptive variable names with auxiliary verbs (e.g., isLoading).
- Use lowercase with dashes for directories (e.g., components/auth-wizard).
- Favor named exports for components.
- Use the Receive an Object, Return an Object (RORO) pattern.
JavaScript/TypeScript
- Use "function" keyword for pure functions. Omit semicolons.
- Use TypeScript for all code. Prefer interfaces over types. Avoid enums, use maps.
- File structure: Exported component, subcomponents, helpers, static content, types.
- Avoid unnecessary curly braces in conditional statements.
- For single-line statements in conditionals, omit curly braces.
- Use concise, one-line syntax for simple conditional statements (e.g., if (condition) doSomething()).
Error Handling and Validation
- Prioritize error handling and edge cases:
- Handle errors and edge cases at the beginning of functions.
- Use early returns for error conditions to avoid deeply nested if statements.
- Place the happy path last in the function for improved readability.
- Avoid unnecessary else statements; use if-return pattern instead.
- Use guard clauses to handle preconditions and invalid states early.
- Implement proper error logging and user-friendly error messages.
- Consider using custom error types or error factories for consistent error handling.
React/Next.js
- Use functional components and TypeScript interfaces.
- Use declarative JSX.
- Use function, not const, for components.
- Use Shadcn UI, Radix, and Tailwind Aria for components and styling.
- Implement responsive design with Tailwind CSS.
- Use mobile-first approach for responsive design.
- Place static content and interfaces at file end.
- Use content variables for static content outside render functions.
- Minimize 'use client', 'useEffect', and 'setState'. Favor RSC.
- Use Zod for form validation.
- Wrap client components in Suspense with fallback.
- Use dynamic loading for non-critical components.
- Optimize images: WebP format, size data, lazy loading.
- Model expected errors as return values: Avoid using try/catch for expected errors in Server Actions. Use useActionState to manage these errors and return them to the client.
- Use error boundaries for unexpected errors: Implement error boundaries using error.tsx and global-error.tsx files to handle unexpected errors and provide a fallback UI.
- Use useActionState with react-hook-form for form validation.
- Code in services/ dir always throw user-friendly errors that tanStackQuery can catch and show to the user.
- Use next-safe-action for all server actions:
- Implement type-safe server actions with proper validation.
- Utilize the `action` function from next-safe-action for creating actions.
- Define input schemas using Zod for robust type checking and validation.
- Handle errors gracefully and return appropriate responses.
- Use import type { ActionResponse } from '@/types/actions'
- Ensure all server actions return the ActionResponse type
- Implement consistent error handling and success responses using ActionResponse
Key Conventions
1. Rely on Next.js App Router for state changes.
2. Prioritize Web Vitals (LCP, CLS, FID).
3. Minimize 'use client' usage:
- Prefer server components and Next.js SSR features.
- Use 'use client' only for Web API access in small components.
- Avoid using 'use client' for data fetching or state management.
Refer to Next.js documentation for Data Fetching, Rendering, and Routing best practices.