Terms of Use

Last updated: 2026-05-08

By using ViteCode you agree to the following short, plain-language terms.

Site is provided as-is

ViteCode is provided "as-is", without warranty of any kind. The generators produce template text deterministically from your selections; ViteCode does not guarantee the output is correct, complete, or fit for any particular project. You are responsible for reviewing the generated text before committing it to your codebase.

To the extent permitted by law, the operator of ViteCode is not liable for any damages arising from your use of the site or of the text it produces.

Copyright on generated output

You own the copyright on any text the ViteCode generators produce from your inputs. ViteCode claims no rights over the rule files, prompts, checklists, or other output generated through the site. Treat the output the same way you would treat any code you wrote yourself: review it, edit it, license it however you want.

The site's own source code, branding, copy, and visual design remain the property of the operator and are not licensed for redistribution by these terms.

Acceptable use

Don't use the site to harass, spam, or break applicable laws. Don't try to bypass the cookies-and-ads consent banner. That's the entire list.

No account, no data

ViteCode has no account system and stores no user data on any server (see the Privacy Policy for the full disclosure). There is nothing to terminate, deactivate, or export.

Third-party services

If you accept the cookies-and-ads banner, ViteCode loads Google AdSense. Your relationship with Google's services is governed by Google's terms, not these.

Changes to these terms

These terms may change as the site evolves. The latest version always lives at /terms; the "Last updated" date at the top reflects the most recent revision.

Governing law

These terms are governed by the laws of the jurisdiction in which the site operator is resident at the time a dispute arises. Because the site is operated anonymously and has no account system, disputes are expected to be rare; if one does arise, both parties agree to attempt good-faith resolution before pursuing other remedies.