Claude-skill-registry cli-ux-patterns
CLI user experience best practices for error messages, colors, progress indicators, and output formatting. Use when improving CLI usability and user experience.
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 "$T/skills/data/cli-ux-patterns" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-cli-ux-patterns && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
skills/data/cli-ux-patterns/SKILL.mdsource content
CLI UX Patterns Skill
Best practices and patterns for creating delightful command-line user experiences.
Error Message Patterns
The Three Parts of Good Error Messages
- What went wrong - Clear description of the error
- Why it matters - Context about the operation
- How to fix it - Actionable suggestions
bail!( "Failed to read config file: {}\n\n\ The application needs a valid configuration to start.\n\n\ To fix this:\n\ 1. Create a config file: myapp init\n\ 2. Or specify a different path: --config /path/to/config.toml\n\ 3. Check file permissions: ls -l {}", path.display(), path.display() );
Using miette for Rich Diagnostics
#[derive(Error, Debug, Diagnostic)] #[error("Configuration error")] #[diagnostic( code(config::invalid), url("https://docs.example.com/config"), help("Check the syntax of your configuration file") )] struct ConfigError { #[source_code] src: String, #[label("invalid value here")] span: SourceSpan, }
Color Usage Patterns
Semantic Colors
- Red - Errors, failures, destructive actions
- Yellow - Warnings, cautions
- Green - Success, completion, safe operations
- Blue - Information, hints, links
- Cyan - Highlights, emphasis
- Dim/Gray - Less important info, metadata
use owo_colors::OwoColorize; // Status indicators with colors println!("{} Build succeeded", "✓".green().bold()); println!("{} Warning: using default", "⚠".yellow().bold()); println!("{} Error: file not found", "✗".red().bold()); println!("{} Info: processing 10 files", "ℹ".blue().bold());
Respecting NO_COLOR
use owo_colors::{OwoColorize, Stream}; fn print_status(message: &str, is_error: bool) { let stream = if is_error { Stream::Stderr } else { Stream::Stdout }; if is_error { eprintln!("{}", message.if_supports_color(stream, |text| text.red())); } else { println!("{}", message.if_supports_color(stream, |text| text.green())); } }
Progress Indication Patterns
When to Use Progress Bars
- File downloads/uploads
- Bulk processing with known count
- Multi-step processes
- Any operation > 2 seconds with known total
use indicatif::{ProgressBar, ProgressStyle}; let pb = ProgressBar::new(items.len() as u64); pb.set_style( ProgressStyle::default_bar() .template("{spinner:.green} [{bar:40}] {pos}/{len} {msg}")? .progress_chars("=>-") ); for item in items { pb.set_message(format!("Processing {}", item.name)); process(item)?; pb.inc(1); } pb.finish_with_message("Complete!");
When to Use Spinners
- Unknown duration operations
- Waiting for external resources
- Operations < 2 seconds
- Indeterminate progress
let spinner = ProgressBar::new_spinner(); spinner.set_style( ProgressStyle::default_spinner() .template("{spinner:.green} {msg}")? ); spinner.set_message("Connecting to server..."); // Do work spinner.finish_with_message("Connected!");
Interactive Prompt Patterns
When to Prompt vs When to Fail
Prompt when:
- Optional information for better UX
- Choosing from known options
- Confirmation for destructive operations
- First-time setup/initialization
Fail with error when:
- Required information
- Non-interactive environment (CI/CD)
- Piped input/output
- --yes flag provided
use dialoguer::Confirm; fn delete_resource(name: &str, force: bool) -> Result<()> { if !force && atty::is(atty::Stream::Stdin) { let confirmed = Confirm::new() .with_prompt(format!("Delete {}? This cannot be undone", name)) .default(false) .interact()?; if !confirmed { println!("Cancelled"); return Ok(()); } } // Perform deletion Ok(()) }
Smart Defaults
use dialoguer::Input; fn get_project_name(current_dir: &Path) -> Result<String> { let default = current_dir .file_name() .and_then(|n| n.to_str()) .unwrap_or("my-project"); Input::new() .with_prompt("Project name") .default(default.to_string()) .interact_text() }
Output Formatting Patterns
Human-Readable vs Machine-Readable
#[derive(Parser)] struct Cli { #[arg(long)] json: bool, #[arg(short, long)] verbose: bool, } fn print_results(results: &[Item], cli: &Cli) { if cli.json { // Machine-readable println!("{}", serde_json::to_string_pretty(&results).unwrap()); } else { // Human-readable for item in results { println!("{} {} - {}", if item.active { "✓".green() } else { "✗".red() }, item.name.bold(), item.description.dimmed() ); } } }
Table Output
use comfy_table::{Table, Cell, Color}; fn print_table(items: &[Item]) { let mut table = Table::new(); table.set_header(vec!["Name", "Status", "Created"]); for item in items { let status_color = if item.active { Color::Green } else { Color::Red }; table.add_row(vec![ Cell::new(&item.name), Cell::new(&item.status).fg(status_color), Cell::new(&item.created), ]); } println!("{table}"); }
Verbosity Patterns
Progressive Disclosure
fn log_message(level: u8, quiet: bool, message: &str) { match (level, quiet) { (_, true) => {}, // Quiet mode: no output (0, false) => {}, // Default: only errors (1, false) => println!("{}", message), // -v: basic info (2, false) => println!("INFO: {}", message), // -vv: detailed _ => println!("[DEBUG] {}", message), // -vvv: everything } }
Quiet Mode
#[derive(Parser)] struct Cli { #[arg(short, long)] quiet: bool, #[arg(short, long, action = ArgAction::Count, conflicts_with = "quiet")] verbose: u8, }
Confirmation Patterns
Destructive Operations
// Always require confirmation for: // - Deleting data // - Overwriting files // - Production deployments // - Irreversible operations fn deploy_to_production(force: bool) -> Result<()> { if !force { println!("{}", "WARNING: Deploying to PRODUCTION".red().bold()); println!("This will affect live users."); let confirmed = Confirm::new() .with_prompt("Are you absolutely sure?") .default(false) .interact()?; if !confirmed { return Ok(()); } } // Deploy Ok(()) }
Stdout vs Stderr
Best Practices
- stdout - Program output, data, results
- stderr - Errors, warnings, progress, diagnostics
// Correct usage println!("result: {}", data); // stdout - actual output eprintln!("Error: {}", error); // stderr - error message eprintln!("Processing..."); // stderr - progress update // This allows piping output while seeing progress: // myapp process file.txt | other_command // (progress messages don't interfere with piped data)
Accessibility Considerations
Screen Reader Friendly
// Always include text prefixes, not just symbols fn print_status(level: Level, message: &str) { let (symbol, prefix) = match level { Level::Success => ("✓", "SUCCESS:"), Level::Error => ("✗", "ERROR:"), Level::Warning => ("⚠", "WARNING:"), Level::Info => ("ℹ", "INFO:"), }; // Both symbol and text for accessibility println!("{} {} {}", symbol, prefix, message); }
Color Blindness Considerations
- Don't rely on color alone
- Use symbols/icons with colors
- Test with color blindness simulators
- Provide text alternatives
The 12-Factor CLI Principles
- Great help - Comprehensive, discoverable
- Prefer flags to args - More explicit
- Respect POSIX - Follow conventions
- Use stdout for output - Enable piping
- Use stderr for messaging - Keep output clean
- Handle signals - Respond to Ctrl+C gracefully
- Be quiet by default - User controls verbosity
- Fail fast - Validate early
- Support --help and --version - Always
- Be explicit - Avoid surprising behavior
- Be consistent - Follow patterns
- Make it easy - Good defaults, clear errors