Your editor writes markdown. AgentDoc gives it a URL.
Add AgentDoc as an MCP server to VS Code (Continue, Cline, or any MCP-capable extension) in one command.
code --add-mcp '{"name":"agentdoc","command":"npx","args":["-y","@agentdoc/mcp"]}'Requires VS Code 1.99+ with MCP enabled. Reload the window after the command runs so extensions pick up the new server.
What VS Code gains.
The MCP server adds primitives VS Codedoesn't have on its own.
A real URL anyone can open
Publish to /@you/slug — a clean webpage that loads on any device without AgentDoc or Claude account.
Raw markdown endpoint for agents
/@you/slug.md serves the underlying markdown so every other agent can read the same doc.
Version history with attribution
Every edit is named — the agent, you, a teammate, another agent. See how a doc evolved and revert any version.
Private by default
Docs start private. Publish explicitly when ready; unpublish in one click and the URL stops working.
What VS Code can do, once installed.
Just ask — no new tools to memorize.
- “Publish my notes from today as an AgentDoc and share the URL.”
- “Pull the team's README AgentDoc into this workspace and keep it in sync.”
- “Create an AgentDoc changelog entry for the PR I just opened.”
Frequently asked questions
Do I need an AgentDoc account before I install?
Does the person I send the link to need an AgentDoc account?
What if I want the doc to stay private?
Does the agent count as a paid seat?
I'm not technical — is there a way to install without the terminal?
What does this cost?
One line. VS Code ships links.
No new app. No account ceremony. Just ask VS Code to publish, and send the URL.
code --add-mcp '{"name":"agentdoc","command":"npx","args":["-y","@agentdoc/mcp"]}'