
swiftui-ui-patterns
PopularBest practices and example-driven guidance for building SwiftUI views and components. Use when creating or refactoring SwiftUI UI, designing tab architecture with TabView, composing screens, or needing component-specific patterns and examples.
Best practices and example-driven guidance for building SwiftUI views and components. Use when creating or refactoring SwiftUI UI, designing tab architecture with TabView, composing screens, or needing component-specific patterns and examples.
SwiftUI UI Patterns
Quick start
Choose a track based on your goal:
Existing project
- Identify the feature or screen and the primary interaction model (list, detail, editor, settings, tabbed).
- Find a nearby example in the repo with
rg "TabView\("or similar, then read the closest SwiftUI view. - Apply local conventions: prefer SwiftUI-native state, keep state local when possible, and use environment injection for shared dependencies.
- Choose the relevant component reference from
references/components-index.mdand follow its guidance. - Build the view with small, focused subviews and SwiftUI-native data flow.
New project scaffolding
- Start with
references/app-scaffolding-wiring.mdto wire TabView + NavigationStack + sheets. - Add a minimal
AppTabandRouterPathbased on the provided skeletons. - Choose the next component reference based on the UI you need first (TabView, NavigationStack, Sheets).
- Expand the route and sheet enums as new screens are added.
General rules to follow
- Use modern SwiftUI state (
@State,@Binding,@Observable,@Environment) and avoid unnecessary view models. - Prefer composition; keep views small and focused.
- Use async/await with
.taskand explicit loading/error states. - Maintain existing legacy patterns only when editing legacy files.
- Follow the project's formatter and style guide.
- Sheets: Prefer
.sheet(item:)over.sheet(isPresented:)when state represents a selected model. Avoidif letinside a sheet body. Sheets should own their actions and calldismiss()internally instead of forwardingonCancel/onConfirmclosures.
Workflow for a new SwiftUI view
- Define the view's state and its ownership location.
- Identify dependencies to inject via
@Environment. - Sketch the view hierarchy and extract repeated parts into subviews.
- Implement async loading with
.taskand explicit state enum if needed. - Add accessibility labels or identifiers when the UI is interactive.
- Validate with a build and update usage callsites if needed.
Component references
Use references/components-index.md as the entry point. Each component reference should include:
- Intent and best-fit scenarios.
- Minimal usage pattern with local conventions.
- Pitfalls and performance notes.
- Paths to existing examples in the current repo.
Sheet patterns
Item-driven sheet (preferred)
@State private var selectedItem: Item?
.sheet(item: $selectedItem) { item in
EditItemSheet(item: item)
}
Sheet owns its actions
struct EditItemSheet: View {
@Environment(\.dismiss) private var dismiss
@Environment(Store.self) private var store
let item: Item
@State private var isSaving = false
var body: some View {
VStack {
Button(isSaving ? "Saving…" : "Save") {
Task { await save() }
}
}
}
private func save() async {
isSaving = true
await store.save(item)
dismiss()
}
}
Adding a new component reference
- Create
references/<component>.md. - Keep it short and actionable; link to concrete files in the current repo.
- Update
references/components-index.mdwith the new entry.
You Might Also Like
Related Skills

cache-components
Expert guidance for Next.js Cache Components and Partial Prerendering (PPR). **PROACTIVE ACTIVATION**: Use this skill automatically when working in Next.js projects that have `cacheComponents: true` in their next.config.ts/next.config.js. When this config is detected, proactively apply Cache Components patterns and best practices to all React Server Component implementations. **DETECTION**: At the start of a session in a Next.js project, check for `cacheComponents: true` in next.config. If enabled, this skill's patterns should guide all component authoring, data fetching, and caching decisions. **USE CASES**: Implementing 'use cache' directive, configuring cache lifetimes with cacheLife(), tagging cached data with cacheTag(), invalidating caches with updateTag()/revalidateTag(), optimizing static vs dynamic content boundaries, debugging cache issues, and reviewing Cache Component implementations.
vercel
component-refactoring
Refactor high-complexity React components in Dify frontend. Use when `pnpm analyze-component --json` shows complexity > 50 or lineCount > 300, when the user asks for code splitting, hook extraction, or complexity reduction, or when `pnpm analyze-component` warns to refactor before testing; avoid for simple/well-structured components, third-party wrappers, or when the user explicitly wants testing without refactoring.
langgenius
web-artifacts-builder
Suite of tools for creating elaborate, multi-component claude.ai HTML artifacts using modern frontend web technologies (React, Tailwind CSS, shadcn/ui). Use for complex artifacts requiring state management, routing, or shadcn/ui components - not for simple single-file HTML/JSX artifacts.
anthropics
frontend-design
Create distinctive, production-grade frontend interfaces with high design quality. Use this skill when the user asks to build web components, pages, artifacts, posters, or applications (examples include websites, landing pages, dashboards, React components, HTML/CSS layouts, or when styling/beautifying any web UI). Generates creative, polished code and UI design that avoids generic AI aesthetics.
anthropics
react-modernization
Upgrade React applications to latest versions, migrate from class components to hooks, and adopt concurrent features. Use when modernizing React codebases, migrating to React Hooks, or upgrading to latest React versions.
wshobson
tailwind-design-system
Build scalable design systems with Tailwind CSS v4, design tokens, component libraries, and responsive patterns. Use when creating component libraries, implementing design systems, or standardizing UI patterns.
wshobson