You are helping the user add a new command to their Obsidian plugin. 1. Ask the user for: - Command id (kebab-case) - Command display name - Whether it needs an editor callback (operates on editor content) - Whether it needs a check callback (conditional execution) - Hotkey (optional) 2. Read the main.ts file to understand the current plugin structure 3. Add the command using this.addCommand() in the onload() method: - For simple commands: use callback - For editor commands: use editorCallback with Editor and MarkdownView params - For conditional commands: use checkCallback with checking parameter 4. Implement the command logic based on user requirements Example patterns: - Simple command: Opens modal, shows notice, triggers action - Editor command: Reads/modifies selected text or cursor position - Check command: Only available in certain contexts (e.g., when markdown view is active) Reference the instruct plugin for complex command examples.