"Continue.dev for Teams: Private Coding Assistants with Repo Context and Policy Controls"
Private coding assistants become truly valuable only when they understand your repositories, respect your standards, and operate within clear organizational boundaries. This book is written for experienced developers, platform engineers, engineering managers, and security-minded technical leaders who want more than ad hoc AI productivity gains. It shows how to turn Continue.dev into a governed team platform for building private assistants that are useful in daily engineering work and trustworthy in production environments.
Across the book, readers learn how Continue's architecture spans IDE, terminal, and automated workflows; how durable agents are defined with `config.yaml`; how model roles, tool use, repository context, and documentation grounding shape assistant behavior; and how rules, policies, access controls, and Mission Control support enterprise governance. The emphasis is practical and architectural: designing assistants that are reproducible, shareable, auditable, and aligned with team standards while balancing accuracy, cost, autonomy, and safety.
Rather than treating configuration as a personal preference, this book treats it as managed infrastructure. It is especially useful for teams rolling out private AI capabilities across multiple repositories and users, and it assumes readers are already comfortable with modern software delivery, source control, and developer tooling. The result is a rigorous guide to deploying Continue as a high-trust internal platform, not mere