Internal tools are always available and don't require configuration. Here's how Workbench uses each one.
Think: Planning and reasoning
Think is Workbench's planning scratchpad. When you make a complex request, Workbench uses Think to break it down into steps, reason through the best approach, plan which tools to use and in what order, and consider edge cases. You won't usually see it in action; it works behind the scenes.
Code analyst: Python code and visualizations
Code analyst generates and runs Python code within your Tines environment. It can process and transform data, perform calculations and statistical analysis, create charts and visualizations, generate documents (PDFs, CSVs, etc.), and parse complex data structures. When you ask Workbench to analyze data or run calculations, it uses Code analyst.
Formulas docs: Up-to-date formula documentation
Formulas docs provides current documentation for all Tines formulas. When you ask about formula syntax, capabilities, or examples, Workbench consults this tool to make sure its answers are accurate. This is useful because Tines formulas are regularly updated.
Memory: Persistent context across conversations
Memory stores context about you and your work so Workbench can recall it in future conversations. You don't configure or manage it manually. Workbench builds memory automatically as you work, using three underlying tools (create memory, search memory, and search past messages).
Memory is different from custom instructions, which you set manually and which apply to every conversation. Memory builds over time based on what you discuss and is stored securely within your Tines tenant, visible only to you.