Claude-skills cli-developer
Use when building CLI tools, implementing argument parsing, or adding interactive prompts. Invoke for parsing flags and subcommands, displaying progress bars and spinners, generating bash/zsh/fish completion scripts, CLI design, shell completions, and cross-platform terminal applications using commander, click, typer, or cobra.
install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/Jeffallan/claude-skills
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/Jeffallan/claude-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/cli-developer" ~/.claude/skills/jeffallan-claude-skills-cli-developer-dff03b && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
skills/cli-developer/SKILL.mdsource content
CLI Developer
Core Workflow
- Analyze UX — Identify user workflows, command hierarchy, common tasks. Validate by listing all commands and their expected
output before writing code.--help - Design commands — Plan subcommands, flags, arguments, configuration. Confirm flag naming is consistent and no existing signatures are broken.
- Implement — Build with the appropriate CLI framework for the language (see Reference Guide below). After wiring up commands, run
to verify help text renders correctly and<cli> --help
to confirm version output.<cli> --version - Polish — Add completions, help text, error messages, progress indicators. Verify TTY detection for color output and graceful SIGINT handling.
- Test — Run cross-platform smoke tests; benchmark startup time (target: <50ms).
Reference Guide
Load detailed guidance based on context:
| Topic | Reference | Load When |
|---|---|---|
| Design Patterns | | Subcommands, flags, config, architecture |
| Node.js CLIs | | commander, yargs, inquirer, chalk |
| Python CLIs | | click, typer, argparse, rich |
| Go CLIs | | cobra, viper, bubbletea |
| UX Patterns | | Progress bars, colors, help text |
Quick-Start Example
Node.js (commander)
#!/usr/bin/env node // npm install commander const { program } = require('commander'); program .name('mytool') .description('Example CLI') .version('1.0.0'); program .command('greet <name>') .description('Greet a user') .option('-l, --loud', 'uppercase the greeting') .action((name, opts) => { const msg = `Hello, ${name}!`; console.log(opts.loud ? msg.toUpperCase() : msg); }); program.parse();
For Python (click/typer) and Go (cobra) quick-start examples, see
references/python-cli.md and references/go-cli.md.
Constraints
MUST DO
- Keep startup time under 50ms
- Provide clear, actionable error messages
- Support
and--help
flags--version - Use consistent flag naming conventions
- Handle SIGINT (Ctrl+C) gracefully
- Validate user input early
- Support both interactive and non-interactive modes
- Test on Windows, macOS, and Linux
MUST NOT DO
- Block on synchronous I/O unnecessarily — use async reads or stream processing instead.
- Print to stdout when output will be piped — write logs/diagnostics to stderr.
- Use colors when output is not a TTY — detect before applying color:
// Node.js const useColor = process.stdout.isTTY;# Python import sys use_color = sys.stdout.isatty()// Go import "golang.org/x/term" useColor := term.IsTerminal(int(os.Stdout.Fd())) - Break existing command signatures — treat flag/subcommand renames as breaking changes.
- Require interactive input in CI/CD environments — always provide non-interactive fallbacks via flags or env vars.
- Hardcode paths or platform-specific logic — use
/os.homedir()
/os.UserHomeDir()
instead.Path.home() - Ship without shell completions — all three frameworks above have built-in completion generation.
Output Templates
When implementing CLI features, provide:
- Command structure (main entry point, subcommands)
- Configuration handling (files, env vars, flags)
- Core implementation with error handling
- Shell completion scripts if applicable
- Brief explanation of UX decisions
Knowledge Reference
CLI frameworks (commander, yargs, oclif, click, typer, argparse, cobra, viper), terminal UI (chalk, inquirer, rich, bubbletea), testing (snapshot testing, E2E), distribution (npm, pip, homebrew, releases), performance optimization