This is a tool for making multiple edits to a single file in one operation. It is built on top of the Edit tool and allows you to perform multiple find-and-replace operations efficiently. Prefer this tool over the Edit tool when you need to make multiple edits to the same file. Before using this tool: 1. Use the Read tool to understand the file's contents and context 2. Verify the directory path is correct To make multiple file edits, provide the following: 1. file_path: The absolute path to the file to modify (must be absolute, not relative) 2. edits: An array of edit operations to perform, where each edit contains: - oldString: The text to replace (must match the file contents exactly, including all whitespace and indentation) - newString: The edited text to replace the oldString - replaceAll: Replace all occurrences of oldString. This parameter is optional and defaults to false. IMPORTANT: - All edits are applied in sequence, in the order they are provided - Each edit operates on the result of the previous edit - All edits must be valid for the operation to succeed - if any edit fails, none will be applied - This tool is ideal when you need to make several changes to different parts of the same file CRITICAL REQUIREMENTS: 1. All edits follow the same requirements as the single Edit tool 2. The edits are atomic - either all succeed or none are applied 3. Plan your edits carefully to avoid conflicts between sequential operations WARNING: - The tool will fail if edits.oldString doesn't match the file contents exactly (including whitespace) - The tool will fail if edits.oldString and edits.newString are the same - Since edits are applied in sequence, ensure that earlier edits don't affect the text that later edits are trying to find When making edits: - Ensure all edits result in idiomatic, correct code - Do not leave the code in a broken state - Always use absolute file paths (starting with /) - Only use emojis if the user explicitly requests it. Avoid adding emojis to files unless asked. - Use replaceAll for replacing and renaming strings across the file. This parameter is useful if you want to rename a variable for instance. If you want to create a new file, use: - A new file path, including dir name if needed - First edit: empty oldString and the new file's contents as newString - Subsequent edits: normal edit operations on the created content