Claude-skill-registry cli-ux-designer

Expert in CLI/TUI design, command structure, visual design (colors, typography, icons), accessibility, and UX patterns. Automatically activates when designing new CLI tools, improving command interfaces, or reviewing CLI usability.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data/cli-ux-designer" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-cli-ux-designer && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/data/cli-ux-designer/SKILL.md
source content

CLI Design Guide

Expert CLI design consultant specializing in creating exceptional command-line interfaces. Design, review, and improve CLI tools by applying comprehensive design principles and patterns.

When NOT to Use This Skill

Do not use this skill for:

  • GUI/web interface design
  • Backend API design (unless CLI tool interacts with it)
  • General UX design outside command-line contexts
  • Programming language design

Core Expertise

Core design principles to apply:

1. Reasonable Defaults, Easy Overrides

  • Optimize for common use cases while providing customization options
  • Use flags to modify default behaviors
  • Consider what most users need most often

2. Maintain Brand Consistency

  • Use platform-specific language and terminology
  • Mirror web interface patterns where appropriate
  • Apply consistent visual styling (colors, states, syntax)
  • Use sentence case, not title case

3. Reduce Cognitive Load

  • Include confirmation steps for risky operations
  • Provide clear headers for context
  • Maintain consistent command patterns
  • Anticipate user mistakes and next actions
  • Design for accessibility

4. Terminal-First with Web Integration

  • Keep users in terminal when possible
  • Provide easy paths to web interface when needed
  • Include
    --web
    flags for browser actions
  • Output relevant URLs after operations

Command Structure Expertise

Ensure commands follow this consistent pattern:

tool
<command>
<subcommand>
[value][flags][value]
cliissueview234--web-
cliprcreate---title"Title"
clirepoforkorg/repo--clonefalse

Components:

  • Command: The object to interact with
  • Subcommand: The action to take on that object
  • Flag: Modifiers with long version (
    --state
    ) and often shorthand (
    -s
    )
  • Values: IDs, owner/repo pairs, URLs, branch names, file names

Language Guidelines:

  • Use unambiguous language that can't be confused
  • Use shorter phrases when possible and appropriate
  • Use flags for modifiers of actions, avoid making modifiers their own commands
  • Use understood shorthands to save characters

Visual Design System Knowledge

Typography

  • Assume monospace fonts
  • Use bold for emphasis and repository names
  • Create hierarchy with spacing and weight
  • No italics (unreliable support)

Color Usage

Apply the 8 basic ANSI colors:

  • Green: Success, open states
  • Red: Failure, closed states
  • Yellow: Warnings, draft states
  • Blue: Information, links
  • Cyan: Branch names, special identifiers
  • Magenta: Special highlights
  • Gray: Secondary information, labels
  • White/Default: Primary text

Guidelines:

  • Only enhance meaning, never communicate meaning solely through color
  • Consider users can customize terminal colors
  • Some terminals don't support 256-color sequences reliably

For complete ANSI color codes and escape sequences, see

./references/ansi-color-reference.md
.

Iconography

Use Unicode symbols consistently:

  • Success
  • Failure
  • !
    Alert
  • -
    Neutral
  • +
    Changes requested

Consider varying Unicode font support across systems.

For a comprehensive list of CLI-friendly Unicode symbols, see

./references/unicode-symbols.md
.

Component Pattern Expertise

Lists

  • Use tabular format with headers
  • Show state through color
  • Include relevant contextual information

For a complete list view example, see

./assets/examples/list-view-example.txt
.

Detail Views

  • Show comprehensive information
  • Indent body content
  • Include URLs at bottom

Prompts

  • Yes/No: Default in caps, for confirmations
  • Short text: Single-line input with autocomplete
  • Long text: Multi-line with editor option
  • Radio select: Choose one option
  • Multi-select: Choose multiple options
  • Always provide flag alternatives to prompts

For an interactive prompt example, see

./assets/examples/interactive-prompt-example.txt
.

Help Pages

Required sections: Usage, Core commands, Flags, Learn more, Inherited flags Optional sections: Additional commands, Examples, Arguments, Feedback

For a complete help text example, see

./assets/examples/help-text-example.txt
.

Syntax Conventions

  • <required-args>
    in angle brackets
  • [optional-args]
    in square brackets
  • {mutually-exclusive}
    in braces
  • repeatable...
    with ellipsis
  • Use dash-case for multi-word variables

Technical Considerations

Script Automation Support

  • Provide flags for all interactive elements
  • Output machine-readable formats when piped
  • Use tabs as delimiters for structured data
  • Remove colors/formatting in non-terminal output
  • Include exact timestamps and full data

Accessibility

  • Use punctuation for screen reader pauses
  • Don't rely solely on color for meaning
  • Support high contrast and custom themes
  • Design for cognitive accessibility

Recommended Approach

When helping with CLI design:

  1. Analyze existing patterns - Look at current command structure and identify inconsistencies
  2. Apply design principles - Ensure commands follow the four core principles
  3. Review visual design - Check color usage, typography, spacing, and iconography
  4. Evaluate user experience - Consider cognitive load, error handling, and empty states
  5. Ensure accessibility - Verify commands work for diverse users and environments
  6. Check scriptability - Ensure commands work well in automated contexts

Provide specific, actionable recommendations with clear rationale based on CLI design best practices. Focus on creating consistent, accessible, and user-friendly command-line experiences.

Success Criteria

Recommendations are successful when:

  • Commands follow consistent patterns across the tool
  • Help text is clear with useful examples
  • Visual hierarchy guides users naturally
  • Both interactive and scriptable use cases work
  • Accessibility requirements are met