figma-integration

figma-integration

Guides design-to-code workflow using Figma integration. Helps extract designs, analyze components, and generate implementation specs. Auto-activates when users mention Figma URLs, design implementation, component conversion, or design-to-code workflows. Works with /ccpm:plan, design-approve, design-refine, and /ccpm:figma-refresh commands.

6スター
1フォーク
更新日 1/12/2026
SKILL.md
readonlyread-only
name
figma-integration
description

Guides design-to-code workflow using Figma integration. Helps extract designs, analyze components, and generate implementation specs. Auto-activates when users mention Figma URLs, design implementation, component conversion, or design-to-code workflows. Works with /ccpm:plan, design-approve, design-refine, and /ccpm:figma-refresh commands.

Figma Integration Skill

Transform Figma designs into implementation-ready specifications with CCPM's design-to-code workflow.

When This Skill Activates

This skill auto-activates when:

  • User mentions "Figma" or "design" in implementation context
  • User asks about "component", "design system", or "design tokens"
  • Running /ccpm:plan (starts design process)
  • Running /ccpm:plan (refine designs)
  • Running /ccpm:plan (generate specs)
  • Running /ccpm:figma-refresh (refresh cached designs)
  • User mentions "design-to-code", "design file", or "Figma component"

The Figma Workflow

Phase 1: Design Phase

Command: /ccpm:plan ISSUE-ID

Start the design process by attaching Figma links to your Linear issue:

1. Create/update Linear issue with task description
2. Attach Figma design link in issue description
3. Run /ccpm:plan TASK-123
4. CCPM extracts design metadata and creates options

What happens:

  • Detects Figma links from issue and related documents
  • Analyzes design file metadata (frames, components, assets)
  • Extracts design tokens (colors, typography, spacing)
  • Creates visual options or wireframes
  • Caches design data for instant access

Example:

/ccpm:plan PSN-123

✅ Detected Figma link: https://figma.com/file/ABC123/UserDashboard
📦 Design Analysis:
   - 12 frames found
   - 15 components detected
   - Color palette: 8 colors
   - Typography: 4 font families
   - Spacing pattern: 4px, 8px, 16px grid

Ready for design review. Run: /ccpm:plan PSN-123

Phase 2: Refinement Phase

Command: /ccpm:plan ISSUE-ID [OPTION] [FEEDBACK]

Iterate on designs based on feedback:

1. Review design options from Phase 1
2. Provide feedback or request changes
3. Run /ccpm:plan TASK-123 "feedback"
4. CCPM creates refined design options

What happens:

  • Analyzes your feedback
  • Generates refined design variations
  • Adjusts colors, layout, or components
  • Updates design cache with new versions
  • Shows side-by-side comparisons

Example:

/ccpm:plan PSN-123 1 "Make the buttons larger, use primary color"

🎨 Refining Design Option 1...

Changes applied:
- Button height: 36px → 44px
- Button color: #6366F1 → primary color
- Button spacing: 12px → 16px

Preview: [design-option-1-v2]

Ready for approval? Run: /ccpm:plan PSN-123 1

Phase 3: Approval & Spec Generation

Command: /ccpm:plan ISSUE-ID OPTION-NUMBER

Approve final design and generate implementation specifications:

1. Review refined design options
2. Choose best option
3. Run /ccpm:plan TASK-123 1
4. CCPM generates comprehensive specs

What happens:

  • Locks design as final reference
  • Extracts component specifications
  • Generates implementation specs with:
    • Component breakdown
    • Props and state recommendations
    • Styling specifications
    • Accessibility guidelines
    • Responsive design rules
  • Creates Linear Document with specs
  • Updates issue description with spec link

Example:

/ccpm:plan PSN-123 1

✅ Design Approved!

Generated Implementation Specs:
📄 Component Specifications
📄 Styling Guidelines
📄 Responsive Rules
📄 Accessibility Checklist

Specs saved to: https://linear.app/doc/ABC123
Ready for implementation!

Phase 4: Cache Management

Command: /ccpm:figma-refresh ISSUE-ID

Refresh cached design data when designs change:

1. Update Figma designs
2. Run /ccpm:figma-refresh TASK-123
3. CCPM re-extracts design data
4. Cache is updated with latest designs

When to refresh:

  • Design significantly changed
  • New components added to Figma
  • Colors or typography updated
  • Design tokens modified
  • Last refresh was >1 hour ago (cache TTL)

Design Analysis Deep Dive

What CCPM Extracts From Figma

Component Structure:

Dashboard
├── Header
│   ├── Logo
│   ├── Navigation
│   └── UserMenu
├── Sidebar
│   ├── NavItems
│   └── UserProfile
└── MainContent
    ├── Cards
    └── Charts

Design Tokens:

  • Color palette with hex/RGB values
  • Typography: font families, sizes, weights
  • Spacing: margin, padding, gap values
  • Shadows and effects
  • Border radius patterns

Component Metadata:

  • Frame dimensions (width, height)
  • Layout type (flex, grid, auto)
  • Constraints and responsive behavior
  • Text content and styles
  • Image assets and sizing

Component Detection

CCPM automatically identifies:

  1. UI Components: Buttons, inputs, cards, modals, etc.
  2. Layout Components: Headers, sidebars, grids, etc.
  3. Screens/Pages: Full page layouts with multiple components
  4. Variants: Different states (hover, active, disabled)
  5. Assets: Icons, images, and design patterns

Example detection:

Frame: "Button / Primary / Large"
├── Detection: UI Component (Button)
├── Style: Primary (blue)
├── Size: Large (44px height)
├── State: Default
└── Variations: [Hover, Active, Disabled]

Implementation Specification Generation

What Gets Generated

When you approve a design, CCPM creates specs including:

1. Component Definition

Component: PrimaryButton
Props:
  - label: string (required)
  - size: "sm" | "md" | "lg" (default: "md")
  - disabled: boolean (default: false)
  - onClick: () => void
  - icon?: React.ReactNode

State:
  - loading: boolean
  - hover: boolean
  - focus: boolean

2. Visual Specifications

Sizing:
  - Small: 32px height
  - Medium: 40px height
  - Large: 44px height

Spacing:
  - Horizontal padding: 16px
  - Vertical padding: 8px

Typography:
  - Font: Inter
  - Weight: 600 (semibold)
  - Size: 14px

Colors:
  - Background: #6366F1
  - Text: #FFFFFF
  - Hover: #4F46E5

3. Responsive Rules

Breakpoints:
  - Mobile (< 768px): Single column
  - Tablet (768px - 1024px): Two columns
  - Desktop (> 1024px): Three columns

Mobile adjustments:
  - Button height: 40px → 36px
  - Padding: 16px → 12px
  - Font size: 14px → 12px

4. Accessibility Checklist

WCAG 2.1 AA Compliance:
- [ ] Color contrast ratio ≥ 4.5:1 for text
- [ ] Button hit target ≥ 44x44px
- [ ] Focus indicators visible
- [ ] ARIA labels for icons
- [ ] Keyboard navigation support

Practical Examples

Example 1: Simple Button Component

Start the workflow:

1. Create Linear issue: PSN-100 "Design primary button"
2. Add Figma link to issue description:
   https://figma.com/file/ABC123/Components?node-id=15:2
3. Run: /ccpm:plan PSN-100

Design phase output:

✅ Design Analysis Complete

Component: Button / Primary
├── Size: 44px height
├── Color: #6366F1
├── Typography: Inter, 600, 14px
└── States: Default, Hover, Active, Disabled

Generated specs location: [Linear Document]
Ready for implementation.

Developer implements:

export function PrimaryButton({ label, onClick }) {
  return (
    <button
      onClick={onClick}
      className="h-11 px-4 bg-indigo-600 text-white font-semibold
                 rounded hover:bg-indigo-700 focus:outline-none
                 focus:ring-2 focus:ring-indigo-500"
    >
      {label}
    </button>
  );
}

Example 2: Dashboard Page

Complex multi-component design:

1. Create issue: PSN-200 "Design dashboard page"
2. Add Figma file: https://figma.com/file/XYZ789/Dashboard
3. Run: /ccpm:plan PSN-200

Analysis reveals:

✅ Design Analysis Complete

Components detected: 12
├── Header (1)
├── Sidebar (1)
├── Cards (5)
├── Charts (3)
└── Tables (2)

Color palette:
├── Primary: #6366F1
├── Secondary: #EC4899
├── Neutral: #F3F4F6 - #1F2937
└── Success: #10B981

Typography:
├── Display: Space Mono
├── Body: Inter
└── Code: Monaco

Generated breakdown: [Linear Document]

Recommended approach:
1. Build layout shell (Header + Sidebar)
2. Implement card components
3. Add data visualization
4. Connect to API

Design refinement:

/ccpm:plan PSN-200 1 "Increase sidebar width to 280px,
make cards taller"

✅ Refined Design Option 1

Adjustments:
- Sidebar width: 240px → 280px
- Card height: 220px → 280px
- Card padding: 16px → 20px
- Grid gap: 16px → 20px

Side-by-side comparison: [View]
Ready for approval!

Final approval:

/ccpm:plan PSN-200 1

✅ Dashboard Design Approved!

Implementation specs generated:
📄 Layout Specification (Header, Sidebar, Grid)
📄 Card Component Specs (5 variations)
📄 Chart Integration Guide
📄 Responsive Breakpoints
📄 Accessibility Requirements

Linear Document: [docs/specs/dashboard-implementation]

Next: Run /ccpm:work PSN-200

Example 3: Design Iteration Workflow

Scenario: Design changed mid-implementation

Situation:
- Approved design shows 3-column layout
- Designer changes it to 2-column layout
- Specs are now outdated

Solution:
1. Update Figma file with new layout
2. Run: /ccpm:figma-refresh PSN-300
3. Specs automatically update

Cache refresh process:

/ccpm:figma-refresh PSN-300

🔄 Refreshing Figma cache...

Changes detected:
- ✅ Layout changed: 3-column → 2-column
- ✅ Card sizes updated
- ✅ Color palette modified (1 color added)
- ✅ Typography updated

Updated specs: [Linear Document]
Notified: Design changes affect layout components

Action items:
- Review responsive breakpoints
- Update card widths
- Check new color usage

Best Practices

Do's ✅

  1. Organize your Figma file

    • Use clear, descriptive frame names
    • Group related components
    • Label variants (e.g., "Button / Primary / Large")
    • Document component purpose in descriptions
  2. Keep designs up-to-date

    • Update Figma as designs change
    • Use design tokens consistently
    • Document color meanings (primary, success, error)
    • Update component descriptions with specs
  3. Use descriptive Figma links

    • Link to specific components, not entire file
    • Use node IDs for precise targeting
    • Example: /file/ABC123?node-id=15:2
  4. Attach Figma links to Linear issues

    • Always include design link in issue description
    • Add to existing issues during planning
    • Update links if design file changes
  5. Review extracted specs

    • Verify component detection is correct
    • Check color values match your palette
    • Ensure spacing recommendations work
    • Validate responsive breakpoints

Don'ts ❌

  1. Don't implement without approved specs

    • Always run design-approve first
    • Prevents scope creep
    • Ensures design alignment
  2. Don't ignore cache invalidation

    • Refresh designs when file changes significantly
    • Don't work with stale cache
    • Keeps specs synchronized
  3. Don't use vague frame names

    • "Frame 15" is not helpful
    • Use: "UserCard / Default / Light"
    • Helps CCPM detect components correctly
  4. Don't skip accessibility specs

    • Review WCAG checklist before implementation
    • Test color contrast
    • Verify button sizes and spacing
  5. Don't bypass refinement phase

    • Always iterate with design-refine
    • Get feedback before approval
    • Prevents rework during implementation

Caching & Performance

How Caching Works

CCPM caches Figma data to provide instant access:

Cache storage:

  • Stored in Linear issue comments
  • Timestamped for validation
  • TTL: 1 hour (configurable)
  • Survives across sessions

Cache includes:

  • Component metadata
  • Design tokens (colors, typography, spacing)
  • Frame hierarchy
  • Text content
  • Asset references

Example cache entry:

## 🎨 Figma Design Cache (PSN-123)

Design File: Dashboard.fig
Cached: 2025-11-21 14:30:00 UTC
Expires: 2025-11-21 15:30:00 UTC
Server: figma-repeat

Components: 12
Colors: 8
Typography: 4 styles
Spacing grid: [4, 8, 16, 32]px

Status: ✅ Valid cache
Action: Use `figma-refresh` to update

When Cache Expires

Cache automatically invalidates if:

  • 1 hour has passed
  • Design file was significantly modified
  • User explicitly runs figma-refresh
  • New Figma link was added

What happens when cache expires:

  1. CCPM re-fetches design data from Figma
  2. Analyzes updated design
  3. Updates cache with new data
  4. Notifies of any changes

Rate Limiting

CCPM respects Figma API rate limits:

Official Figma API (6 calls/month):

  • Used for critical operations
  • Careful rate limit management
  • Falls back to cache on limit

Community servers (60 calls/hour):

  • Higher rate limits
  • Recommended for active development
  • Better for iterative design workflows

Check rate limit status:

/ccpm:figma-refresh PSN-123 --status

📊 Figma Rate Limit Status

Official API: 4/6 used (66%)
Community (figma-repeat): 42/60 used (70%)

Recommendation: Use community server to preserve official API calls

Integration with CCPM Commands

Works With Planning Commands

/ccpm:plan

  • Starts design extraction
  • Creates design options
  • Caches metadata

/ccpm:plan

  • Iterates on designs
  • Applies feedback
  • Updates cache

/ccpm:plan

  • Finalizes design
  • Generates full specs
  • Creates Linear Document

Works With Implementation Commands

/ccpm:work

  • Loads approved specs
  • Uses component breakdown
  • References styling guidelines

/ccpm:sync

  • References design specs
  • Verifies implementation matches design
  • Flags design deviations

Works With Utility Commands

/ccpm:figma-refresh

  • Force refresh design cache
  • Check rate limit status
  • View cache information

/ccpm:work

  • Loads design specs for task context
  • Includes component breakdown
  • Shows styling guidelines

Troubleshooting

Design Not Detected

Problem: Figma link not found in issue

Solutions:

  1. Verify link is in issue description

    Add to issue: https://figma.com/file/ABC123/Project
    
  2. Check link format

    ✅ Correct: https://figma.com/file/ABC123/Project
    ❌ Wrong: figma.com/file (missing protocol)
    
  3. Try explicit link parameter

    /ccpm:plan PSN-123 --figma-url "https://..."
    

Colors Not Extracted

Problem: Design colors not in generated specs

Solutions:

  1. Ensure colors are defined in Figma file

    • Use color styles, not custom colors
    • Name colors consistently (e.g., "Primary Blue")
  2. Refresh cache

    /ccpm:figma-refresh PSN-123
    
  3. Check server configuration

    /ccpm:figma-refresh PSN-123 --status
    

Rate Limit Exceeded

Problem: Too many Figma API calls

Solutions:

  1. Switch to community server (higher limits)

    • Community servers: 60/hour
    • Official API: 6/month
  2. Wait for rate limit reset

    • Community servers reset hourly
    • Official API resets monthly
  3. Use cached data

    • Cache remains valid even with rate limit
    • Use figma-refresh only when needed

Spec Generation Failed

Problem: Linear Document creation failed

Solutions:

  1. Check Linear permissions

    • Verify write access to Linear workspace
  2. Try again with larger issue ID

    /ccpm:plan PSN-123 1 --retry
    
  3. Check cache validity

    /ccpm:figma-refresh PSN-123
    

Summary

This skill enables:

  • Design extraction from Figma files
  • Component detection and analysis
  • Specification generation for implementation
  • Design iteration with refinement
  • Cache management for performance
  • Best practices guidance throughout workflow

Typical workflow time:

  • Simple component: 2-5 minutes
  • Complex page: 10-15 minutes
  • Design iteration: 5-10 minutes per cycle

Key commands:

/ccpm:plan PSN-123          # Start design
/ccpm:plan PSN-123      # Iterate
/ccpm:plan PSN-123 1   # Generate specs
/ccpm:figma-refresh PSN-123         # Refresh cache

Integration: Works with /ccpm:plan and /ccpm:figma-refresh commands
MCP Servers: Figma MCP (figma-repeat, figma-trainer-guru, etc.)
Linear Integration: Stores designs and specs in Linear Documents
Shared Module: Uses _shared-figma-detection.md for link detection

You Might Also Like

Related Skills

coding-agent

coding-agent

179Kdev-codegen

Run Codex CLI, Claude Code, OpenCode, or Pi Coding Agent via background process for programmatic control.

openclaw avataropenclaw
入手
add-uint-support

add-uint-support

97Kdev-codegen

Add unsigned integer (uint) type support to PyTorch operators by updating AT_DISPATCH macros. Use when adding support for uint16, uint32, uint64 types to operators, kernels, or when user mentions enabling unsigned types, barebones unsigned types, or uint support.

pytorch avatarpytorch
入手
at-dispatch-v2

at-dispatch-v2

97Kdev-codegen

Convert PyTorch AT_DISPATCH macros to AT_DISPATCH_V2 format in ATen C++ code. Use when porting AT_DISPATCH_ALL_TYPES_AND*, AT_DISPATCH_FLOATING_TYPES*, or other dispatch macros to the new v2 API. For ATen kernel files, CUDA kernels, and native operator implementations.

pytorch avatarpytorch
入手
skill-writer

skill-writer

97Kdev-codegen

Guide users through creating Agent Skills for Claude Code. Use when the user wants to create, write, author, or design a new Skill, or needs help with SKILL.md files, frontmatter, or skill structure.

pytorch avatarpytorch
入手

Implements JavaScript classes in C++ using JavaScriptCore. Use when creating new JS classes with C++ bindings, prototypes, or constructors.

oven-sh avataroven-sh
入手

Creates JavaScript classes using Bun's Zig bindings generator (.classes.ts). Use when implementing new JS APIs in Zig with JSC integration.

oven-sh avataroven-sh
入手