Skills swiftui-ui-patterns

Best practices and example-driven guidance for building SwiftUI views and components, including navigation hierarchies, custom view modifiers, and responsive layouts with stacks and grids. Use when creating or refactoring SwiftUI UI, designing tab architecture with TabView, composing screens with VStack/HStack, managing @State or @Binding, building declarative iOS interfaces, or needing component-specific patterns and examples.

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T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/Dimillian/Skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/swiftui-ui-patterns" ~/.claude/skills/dimillian-skills-swiftui-ui-patterns && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: swiftui-ui-patterns/SKILL.md
source content

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.md
    and follow its guidance.
  • If the interaction reveals secondary content by dragging or scrolling the primary content away, read
    references/scroll-reveal.md
    before implementing gestures manually.
  • Build the view with small, focused subviews and SwiftUI-native data flow.

New project scaffolding

  • Start with
    references/app-wiring.md
    to wire TabView + NavigationStack + sheets.
  • Add a minimal
    AppTab
    and
    RouterPath
    based 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.
  • If the deployment target includes iOS 16 or earlier and cannot use the Observation API introduced in iOS 17, fall back to
    ObservableObject
    with
    @StateObject
    for root ownership,
    @ObservedObject
    for injected observation, and
    @EnvironmentObject
    only for truly shared app-level state.
  • Prefer composition; keep views small and focused.
  • Use async/await with
    .task
    and explicit loading/error states. For restart, cancellation, and debouncing guidance, read
    references/async-state.md
    .
  • Keep shared app services in
    @Environment
    , but prefer explicit initializer injection for feature-local dependencies and models. For root wiring patterns, read
    references/app-wiring.md
    .
  • Prefer the newest SwiftUI API that fits the deployment target and call out the minimum OS whenever a pattern depends on it.
  • 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. Avoid
    if let
    inside a sheet body. Sheets should own their actions and call
    dismiss()
    internally instead of forwarding
    onCancel
    /
    onConfirm
    closures.
  • Scroll-driven reveals: Prefer deriving a normalized progress value from scroll offset and driving the visual state from that single source of truth. Avoid parallel gesture state machines unless scroll alone cannot express the interaction.

State ownership summary

Use the narrowest state tool that matches the ownership model:

ScenarioPreferred pattern
Local UI state owned by one view
@State
Child mutates parent-owned value state
@Binding
Root-owned reference model on iOS 17+
@State
with an
@Observable
type
Child reads or mutates an injected
@Observable
model on iOS 17+
Pass it explicitly as a stored property
Shared app service or configuration
@Environment(Type.self)
Legacy reference model on iOS 16 and earlier
@StateObject
at the root,
@ObservedObject
when injected

Choose the ownership location first, then pick the wrapper. Do not introduce a reference model when plain value state is enough.

Cross-cutting references

  • references/navigationstack.md
    : navigation ownership, per-tab history, and enum routing.
  • references/sheets.md
    : centralized modal presentation and enum-driven sheets.
  • references/deeplinks.md
    : URL handling and routing external links into app destinations.
  • references/app-wiring.md
    : root dependency graph, environment usage, and app shell wiring.
  • references/async-state.md
    :
    .task
    ,
    .task(id:)
    , cancellation, debouncing, and async UI state.
  • references/previews.md
    :
    #Preview
    , fixtures, mock environments, and isolated preview setup.
  • references/performance.md
    : stable identity, observation scope, lazy containers, and render-cost guardrails.

Anti-patterns

  • Giant views that mix layout, business logic, networking, routing, and formatting in one file.
  • Multiple boolean flags for mutually exclusive sheets, alerts, or navigation destinations.
  • Live service calls directly inside
    body
    -driven code paths instead of view lifecycle hooks or injected models/services.
  • Reaching for
    AnyView
    to work around type mismatches that should be solved with better composition.
  • Defaulting every shared dependency to
    @EnvironmentObject
    or a global router without a clear ownership reason.

Workflow for a new SwiftUI view

  1. Define the view's state, ownership location, and minimum OS assumptions before writing UI code.
  2. Identify which dependencies belong in
    @Environment
    and which should stay as explicit initializer inputs.
  3. Sketch the view hierarchy, routing model, and presentation points; extract repeated parts into subviews. For complex navigation, read
    references/navigationstack.md
    ,
    references/sheets.md
    , or
    references/deeplinks.md
    . Build and verify no compiler errors before proceeding.
  4. Implement async loading with
    .task
    or
    .task(id:)
    , plus explicit loading and error states when needed. Read
    references/async-state.md
    when the work depends on changing inputs or cancellation.
  5. Add previews for the primary and secondary states, then add accessibility labels or identifiers when the UI is interactive. Read
    references/previews.md
    when the view needs fixtures or injected mock dependencies.
  6. Validate with a build: confirm no compiler errors, check that previews render without crashing, ensure state changes propagate correctly, and sanity-check that list identity and observation scope will not cause avoidable re-renders. Read
    references/performance.md
    if the screen is large, scroll-heavy, or frequently updated. For common SwiftUI compilation errors — missing
    @State
    annotations, ambiguous
    ViewBuilder
    closures, or mismatched generic types — resolve them before updating callsites. If the build fails: read the error message carefully, fix the identified issue, then rebuild before proceeding to the next step. If a preview crashes, isolate the offending subview, confirm its state initialisation is valid, and re-run the preview before continuing.

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.

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.md
    with the new entry.