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CLAUDE.md

This file provides guidance to Claude Code (claude.ai/code) when working with code in this repository.

Project Overview

This is a Laravel 12 application for sports trainers to manage players, practices, exercises, and ratings. It's designed as a training management system with features for player performance tracking and practice organization.

Technology Stack

  • Backend: Laravel 12 (PHP 8.4+)
  • Frontend: Livewire 3, TailwindCSS, Vue.js components
  • Authentication: Laravel Jetstream with Sanctum
  • Database: SQLite (default), MySQL support
  • Testing: Pest PHP
  • Build: Vite with Laravel plugin
  • UI Framework: FluxUI Pro
  • SoccerDraw: There is a vue app installed which is a drawing tool for soccer exercises. Ignore it until changes to it are explicitly required

Core Architecture

Key Models & Relationships

  • User: Trainers who manage players and practices
  • Player: Athletes with ratings and practice attendance (belongsTo User)
  • Practice: Training sessions with schedules and ratings (hasMany Schedule)
  • Rating: Player performance scores with attendance tracking (belongsTo Player, Practice)
  • Exercise: Training exercises with categories
  • Schedule: Practice time slots and planning

Livewire Components

The application heavily uses Livewire for interactive forms:

  • CreatePlayer - Player registration form
  • CreatePractice - Practice scheduling
  • CreateRating - Player rating system
  • PlayerPracticeRating - Rating interface for practices
  • PracticeRatingsTable - Ratings data display

Common Development Commands

Laravel/PHP Commands

No Server needs to be started as Laravel Herd is running in the background

# Run migrations
php artisan migrate

# Seed database
php artisan db:seed

# Clear caches
php artisan cache:clear
php artisan config:clear
php artisan view:clear

# Generate application key
php artisan key:generate

# Run tests
./vendor/bin/pest

Frontend Commands

# Install dependencies
npm install

# Development build with hot reload
npm run dev

# Production build
npm run build

Database Commands

# Create migration
php artisan make:migration create_table_name

# Create model with migration and factory
php artisan make:model ModelName -mf

# Rollback migrations
php artisan migrate:rollback

Application Structure

Database Schema

  • Uses SQLite for development (see database/database.sqlite)
  • Key tables: users, players, practices, ratings, exercises, categories, schedules
  • Recent addition: attended boolean field in ratings table for attendance tracking

Authentication & Authorization

  • Multi-tenant: Each user (trainer) manages their own players and practices
  • Jetstream provides team management capabilities
  • All routes protected with auth:sanctum middleware

Localization

  • Supports German (de) and English (en)
  • Language files in resources/lang/
  • Uses SetLocale middleware

File Organization

  • Controllers follow resource pattern (PlayerController, PracticeController)
  • Livewire components for forms and interactive elements
  • Blade templates with component-based architecture
  • PDF generation for practice sheets using Spatie/laravel-pdf

Development Workflow

  1. Database Changes: Always create migrations for schema changes
  2. New Features: Consider Livewire components for interactive functionality
  3. Styling: Use TailwindCSS classes, custom soccer-themed colors available
  4. Testing: Write Pest tests in tests/Feature/ and tests/Unit/
  5. Internationalization: Add translations to both language files when adding text

Special Features

  • PDF Export: Practice sheets can be exported as PDFs
  • Rating System: Numeric ratings (1-10) with attendance tracking
  • Practice Scheduling: Recurring practice support with schedule management
  • Player Analytics: Performance tracking over time with chart visualization

Error Handling & Logging

  • Uses Laravel's built-in error handling
  • Sentry integration configured for production error tracking
  • Flash messages for user feedback via session

Deployment Notes

  • Uses Sidecar with Browsershot for PDF generation (requires Puppeteer)
  • Environment variables configured for various services (mail, cache, queue)
  • Supports Docker deployment (Dockerfile present)

Styleguide

Apply this styleguide to every newly created component

// TrainerContainer Color Palette
// Primary Colors - Teal theme from logo
primary-50: #f0fdfa
primary-100: #ccfbf1
primary-200: #99f6e4
primary-300: #5eead4
primary-400: #2dd4bf
primary-500: #14b8a6  // Main brand color
primary-600: #0d9488
primary-700: #0f766e
primary-800: #115e59
primary-900: #134e4a

// Neutral Colors - Grays for UI
gray-50: #f9fafb
gray-100: #f3f4f6
gray-200: #e5e7eb
gray-300: #d1d5db
gray-400: #9ca3af
gray-500: #6b7280
gray-600: #4b5563
gray-700: #374151
gray-800: #1f2937
gray-900: #111827

// Accent Colors
success-green: #10b981
warning-amber: #f59e0b
error-red: #ef4444
info-blue: #3b82f6

// Background Colors
bg-primary: #ffffff
bg-secondary: #f9fafb
bg-tertiary: #f3f4f6
bg-dark: #111827

// Text Colors
text-primary: #111827
text-secondary: #4b5563
text-tertiary: #6b7280
text-inverse: #ffffff

// Border Colors
border-light: #e5e7eb
border-default: #d1d5db
border-dark: #9ca3af

// Shadow Colors
shadow-sm: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.05)
shadow-md: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1)
shadow-lg: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.15)

// Special Effects
gradient-start: #14b8a6
gradient-middle: #0d9488
gradient-end: #0f766e
overlay-light: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.9)
overlay-dark: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5)

===

=== foundation rules ===

Laravel Boost Guidelines

The Laravel Boost guidelines are specifically curated by Laravel maintainers for this application. These guidelines should be followed closely to enhance the user's satisfaction building Laravel applications.

Foundational Context

This application is a Laravel application and its main Laravel ecosystems package & versions are below. You are an expert with them all. Ensure you abide by these specific packages & versions.

  • php - 8.4.16
  • laravel/fortify (FORTIFY) - v1
  • laravel/framework (LARAVEL) - v12
  • laravel/nightwatch (NIGHTWATCH) - v1
  • laravel/prompts (PROMPTS) - v0
  • laravel/sanctum (SANCTUM) - v4
  • livewire/livewire (LIVEWIRE) - v3
  • laravel/mcp (MCP) - v0
  • laravel/pint (PINT) - v1
  • pestphp/pest (PEST) - v3
  • phpunit/phpunit (PHPUNIT) - v11
  • vue (VUE) - v3
  • tailwindcss (TAILWINDCSS) - v3

Conventions

  • You must follow all existing code conventions used in this application. When creating or editing a file, check sibling files for the correct structure, approach, naming.
  • Use descriptive names for variables and methods. For example, isRegisteredForDiscounts, not discount().
  • Check for existing components to reuse before writing a new one.

Verification Scripts

  • Do not create verification scripts or tinker when tests cover that functionality and prove it works. Unit and feature tests are more important.

Application Structure & Architecture

  • Stick to existing directory structure - don't create new base folders without approval.
  • Do not change the application's dependencies without approval.

Frontend Bundling

  • If the user doesn't see a frontend change reflected in the UI, it could mean they need to run npm run build, npm run dev, or composer run dev. Ask them.

Replies

  • Be concise in your explanations - focus on what's important rather than explaining obvious details.

Documentation Files

  • You must only create documentation files if explicitly requested by the user.

=== boost rules ===

Laravel Boost

  • Laravel Boost is an MCP server that comes with powerful tools designed specifically for this application. Use them.

Artisan

  • Use the list-artisan-commands tool when you need to call an Artisan command to double check the available parameters.

URLs

  • Whenever you share a project URL with the user you should use the get-absolute-url tool to ensure you're using the correct scheme, domain / IP, and port.

Tinker / Debugging

  • You should use the tinker tool when you need to execute PHP to debug code or query Eloquent models directly.
  • Use the database-query tool when you only need to read from the database.

Reading Browser Logs With the browser-logs Tool

  • You can read browser logs, errors, and exceptions using the browser-logs tool from Boost.
  • Only recent browser logs will be useful - ignore old logs.

Searching Documentation (Critically Important)

  • Boost comes with a powerful search-docs tool you should use before any other approaches. This tool automatically passes a list of installed packages and their versions to the remote Boost API, so it returns only version-specific documentation specific for the user's circumstance. You should pass an array of packages to filter on if you know you need docs for particular packages.
  • The 'search-docs' tool is perfect for all Laravel related packages, including Laravel, Inertia, Livewire, Filament, Tailwind, Pest, Nova, Nightwatch, etc.
  • You must use this tool to search for Laravel-ecosystem documentation before falling back to other approaches.
  • Search the documentation before making code changes to ensure we are taking the correct approach.
  • Use multiple, broad, simple, topic based queries to start. For example: ['rate limiting', 'routing rate limiting', 'routing'].
  • Do not add package names to queries - package information is already shared. For example, use test resource table, not filament 4 test resource table.

Available Search Syntax

  • You can and should pass multiple queries at once. The most relevant results will be returned first.
  1. Simple Word Searches with auto-stemming - query=authentication - finds 'authenticate' and 'auth'
  2. Multiple Words (AND Logic) - query=rate limit - finds knowledge containing both "rate" AND "limit"
  3. Quoted Phrases (Exact Position) - query="infinite scroll" - Words must be adjacent and in that order
  4. Mixed Queries - query=middleware "rate limit" - "middleware" AND exact phrase "rate limit"
  5. Multiple Queries - queries=["authentication", "middleware"] - ANY of these terms

=== php rules ===

PHP

  • Always use curly braces for control structures, even if it has one line.

Constructors

  • Use PHP 8 constructor property promotion in __construct().
    • public function __construct(public GitHub $github) { }
  • Do not allow empty __construct() methods with zero parameters.

Type Declarations

  • Always use explicit return type declarations for methods and functions.
  • Use appropriate PHP type hints for method parameters.
protected function isAccessible(User $user, ?string $path = null): bool { ... }

Comments

  • Prefer PHPDoc blocks over comments. Never use comments within the code itself unless there is something very complex going on.

PHPDoc Blocks

  • Add useful array shape type definitions for arrays when appropriate.

Enums

  • Typically, keys in an Enum should be TitleCase. For example: FavoritePerson, BestLake, Monthly.

=== herd rules ===

Laravel Herd

  • The application is served by Laravel Herd and will be available at: https?://[kebab-case-project-dir].test. Use the get-absolute-url tool to generate URLs for the user to ensure valid URLs.
  • You must not run any commands to make the site available via HTTP(s). It is always available through Laravel Herd.

=== tests rules ===

Test Enforcement

  • Every change must be programmatically tested. Write a new test or update an existing test, then run the affected tests to make sure they pass.
  • Run the minimum number of tests needed to ensure code quality and speed. Use php artisan test with a specific filename or filter.

=== laravel/core rules ===

Do Things the Laravel Way

  • Use php artisan make: commands to create new files (i.e. migrations, controllers, models, etc.). You can list available Artisan commands using the list-artisan-commands tool.
  • If you're creating a generic PHP class, use php artisan make:class.
  • Pass --no-interaction to all Artisan commands to ensure they work without user input. You should also pass the correct --options to ensure correct behavior.

Database

  • Always use proper Eloquent relationship methods with return type hints. Prefer relationship methods over raw queries or manual joins.
  • Use Eloquent models and relationships before suggesting raw database queries
  • Avoid DB::; prefer Model::query(). Generate code that leverages Laravel's ORM capabilities rather than bypassing them.
  • Generate code that prevents N+1 query problems by using eager loading.
  • Use Laravel's query builder for very complex database operations.

Model Creation

  • When creating new models, create useful factories and seeders for them too. Ask the user if they need any other things, using list-artisan-commands to check the available options to php artisan make:model.

APIs & Eloquent Resources

  • For APIs, default to using Eloquent API Resources and API versioning unless existing API routes do not, then you should follow existing application convention.

Controllers & Validation

  • Always create Form Request classes for validation rather than inline validation in controllers. Include both validation rules and custom error messages.
  • Check sibling Form Requests to see if the application uses array or string based validation rules.

Queues

  • Use queued jobs for time-consuming operations with the ShouldQueue interface.

Authentication & Authorization

  • Use Laravel's built-in authentication and authorization features (gates, policies, Sanctum, etc.).

URL Generation

  • When generating links to other pages, prefer named routes and the route() function.

Configuration

  • Use environment variables only in configuration files - never use the env() function directly outside of config files. Always use config('app.name'), not env('APP_NAME').

Testing

  • When creating models for tests, use the factories for the models. Check if the factory has custom states that can be used before manually setting up the model.
  • Faker: Use methods such as $this->faker->word() or fake()->randomDigit(). Follow existing conventions whether to use $this->faker or fake().
  • When creating tests, make use of php artisan make:test [options] {name} to create a feature test, and pass --unit to create a unit test. Most tests should be feature tests.

Vite Error

  • If you receive an "Illuminate\Foundation\ViteException: Unable to locate file in Vite manifest" error, you can run npm run build or ask the user to run npm run dev or composer run dev.

=== laravel/v12 rules ===

Laravel 12

  • Use the search-docs tool to get version specific documentation.
  • This project upgraded from Laravel 10 without migrating to the new streamlined Laravel file structure.
  • This is perfectly fine and recommended by Laravel. Follow the existing structure from Laravel 10. We do not to need migrate to the new Laravel structure unless the user explicitly requests that.

Laravel 10 Structure

  • Middleware typically lives in app/Http/Middleware/ and service providers in app/Providers/.
  • There is no bootstrap/app.php application configuration in a Laravel 10 structure:
    • Middleware registration happens in app/Http/Kernel.php
    • Exception handling is in app/Exceptions/Handler.php
    • Console commands and schedule register in app/Console/Kernel.php
    • Rate limits likely exist in RouteServiceProvider or app/Http/Kernel.php

Database

  • When modifying a column, the migration must include all of the attributes that were previously defined on the column. Otherwise, they will be dropped and lost.
  • Laravel 11 allows limiting eagerly loaded records natively, without external packages: $query->latest()->limit(10);.

Models

  • Casts can and likely should be set in a casts() method on a model rather than the $casts property. Follow existing conventions from other models.

=== livewire/core rules ===

Livewire Core

  • Use the search-docs tool to find exact version specific documentation for how to write Livewire & Livewire tests.
  • Use the php artisan make:livewire [Posts\CreatePost] artisan command to create new components
  • State should live on the server, with the UI reflecting it.
  • All Livewire requests hit the Laravel backend, they're like regular HTTP requests. Always validate form data, and run authorization checks in Livewire actions.

Livewire Best Practices

  • Livewire components require a single root element.

  • Use wire:loading and wire:dirty for delightful loading states.

  • Add wire:key in loops:

    @foreach ($items as $item)
        <div wire:key="item-{{ $item->id }}">
            {{ $item->name }}
        </div>
    @endforeach
  • Prefer lifecycle hooks like mount(), updatedFoo() for initialization and reactive side effects:

public function mount(User $user) { $this->user = $user; } public function updatedSearch() { $this->resetPage(); }

Testing Livewire

Livewire::test(Counter::class) ->assertSet('count', 0) ->call('increment') ->assertSet('count', 1) ->assertSee(1) ->assertStatus(200);
<code-snippet name="Testing a Livewire component exists within a page" lang="php">
    $this->get('/posts/create')
    ->assertSeeLivewire(CreatePost::class);
</code-snippet>

=== livewire/v3 rules ===

Livewire 3

Key Changes From Livewire 2

  • These things changed in Livewire 2, but may not have been updated in this application. Verify this application's setup to ensure you conform with application conventions.
    • Use wire:model.live for real-time updates, wire:model is now deferred by default.
    • Components now use the App\Livewire namespace (not App\Http\Livewire).
    • Use $this->dispatch() to dispatch events (not emit or dispatchBrowserEvent).
    • Use the components.layouts.app view as the typical layout path (not layouts.app).

New Directives

  • wire:show, wire:transition, wire:cloak, wire:offline, wire:target are available for use. Use the documentation to find usage examples.

Alpine

  • Alpine is now included with Livewire, don't manually include Alpine.js.
  • Plugins included with Alpine: persist, intersect, collapse, and focus.

Lifecycle Hooks

  • You can listen for livewire:init to hook into Livewire initialization, and fail.status === 419 for the page expiring:
document.addEventListener('livewire:init', function () { Livewire.hook('request', ({ fail }) => { if (fail && fail.status === 419) { alert('Your session expired'); } });
Livewire.hook('message.failed', (message, component) => {
    console.error(message);
});

});

=== pint/core rules ===

Laravel Pint Code Formatter

  • You must run vendor/bin/pint --dirty before finalizing changes to ensure your code matches the project's expected style.
  • Do not run vendor/bin/pint --test, simply run vendor/bin/pint to fix any formatting issues.

=== pest/core rules ===

Pest

Testing

  • If you need to verify a feature is working, write or update a Unit / Feature test.

Pest Tests

  • All tests must be written using Pest. Use php artisan make:test --pest {name}.
  • You must not remove any tests or test files from the tests directory without approval. These are not temporary or helper files - these are core to the application.
  • Tests should test all of the happy paths, failure paths, and weird paths.
  • Tests live in the tests/Feature and tests/Unit directories.
  • Pest tests look and behave like this:
it('is true', function () { expect(true)->toBeTrue(); });

Running Tests

  • Run the minimal number of tests using an appropriate filter before finalizing code edits.
  • To run all tests: php artisan test.
  • To run all tests in a file: php artisan test tests/Feature/ExampleTest.php.
  • To filter on a particular test name: php artisan test --filter=testName (recommended after making a change to a related file).
  • When the tests relating to your changes are passing, ask the user if they would like to run the entire test suite to ensure everything is still passing.

Pest Assertions

  • When asserting status codes on a response, use the specific method like assertForbidden and assertNotFound instead of using assertStatus(403) or similar, e.g.:
it('returns all', function () { $response = $this->postJson('/api/docs', []);
$response->assertSuccessful();

});

Mocking

  • Mocking can be very helpful when appropriate.
  • When mocking, you can use the Pest\Laravel\mock Pest function, but always import it via use function Pest\Laravel\mock; before using it. Alternatively, you can use $this->mock() if existing tests do.
  • You can also create partial mocks using the same import or self method.

Datasets

  • Use datasets in Pest to simplify tests which have a lot of duplicated data. This is often the case when testing validation rules, so consider going with this solution when writing tests for validation rules.
it('has emails', function (string $email) { expect($email)->not->toBeEmpty(); })->with([ 'james' => 'james@laravel.com', 'taylor' => 'taylor@laravel.com', ]);

=== tailwindcss/core rules ===

Tailwind Core

  • Use Tailwind CSS classes to style HTML, check and use existing tailwind conventions within the project before writing your own.
  • Offer to extract repeated patterns into components that match the project's conventions (i.e. Blade, JSX, Vue, etc..)
  • Think through class placement, order, priority, and defaults - remove redundant classes, add classes to parent or child carefully to limit repetition, group elements logically
  • You can use the search-docs tool to get exact examples from the official documentation when needed.

Spacing

  • When listing items, use gap utilities for spacing, don't use margins.

    Superior
    Michigan
    Erie

Dark Mode

  • If existing pages and components support dark mode, new pages and components must support dark mode in a similar way, typically using dark:.

=== tailwindcss/v3 rules ===

Tailwind 3

  • Always use Tailwind CSS v3 - verify you're using only classes supported by this version.