Agent-almanac design-cli-output

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/i18n/caveman-ultra/skills/design-cli-output" ~/.claude/skills/pjt222-agent-almanac-design-cli-output-331e28 && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: i18n/caveman-ultra/skills/design-cli-output/SKILL.md
source content

Design CLI Output

Design consistent, multi-level terminal output for a command-line tool.

When to Use

  • Building a new reporter module for a CLI tool
  • Adding warm or narrative output alongside standard transactional output
  • Standardizing output format across multiple commands
  • Designing JSON machine output parallel to human-readable output
  • Choosing colors, glyphs, and verbosity levels for a new terminal tool

Inputs

  • Required: CLI tool name and primary audience (developers, operators, end users)
  • Required: Commands that need output formatting
  • Optional: Whether a "ceremony" or narrative output variant is desired
  • Optional: Branding constraints (color palette, tone)

Procedure

Step 1: Define the Color Palette

Use chalk to create a named palette object:

Standard palette (transactional output):

let chalk;
try { chalk = (await import('chalk')).default; }
catch { chalk = new Proxy({}, { get: () => (s) => s }); }

// Status colors
const ok = chalk.green;       // success
const fail = chalk.red;       // errors
const warn = chalk.yellow;    // warnings
const info = chalk.cyan;      // identifiers, names
const dim = chalk.dim;        // secondary info, paths
const bold = chalk.bold;      // headers

Warm palette (ceremony/narrative output):

const C = {
  flame: chalk.hex('#FF6B35'),   // active elements, fire
  amber: chalk.hex('#FFB347'),   // arriving items, warm highlights
  spark: chalk.hex('#FFF4E0'),   // individual items (sparks/skills)
  ember: chalk.hex('#8B4513'),   // cold/dormant states
  warm:  chalk.hex('#D4A574'),   // neutral warm text
  dim:   chalk.dim,              // background, secondary
  fail:  chalk.red,              // errors stay red (honest)
};

Palette design rules:

  • Always provide a no-color fallback (the Proxy pattern above)
  • Use hex colors for custom palettes (
    chalk.hex('#FF6B35')
    )
  • Keep the fail/error color red regardless of palette theme
  • Name palette entries by semantic role, not visual appearance

Expected: A palette object with named entries and a no-color fallback.

On failure: If chalk is unavailable (piped output, CI), the Proxy fallback returns strings unchanged. Test with

NO_COLOR=1
environment variable.

Step 2: Choose Status Indicators

Select Unicode glyphs or ASCII characters for status communication:

ASCII (maximum compatibility):

+  created/installed (green)
-  removed/deleted (red)
=  skipped/unchanged (dim)
!  error/warning (red)

Unicode (richer, needs UTF-8 terminal):

✦  item/skill/practice (spark)
◉  active/burning state
◎  cooling/embers state
○  cold/dormant state
◌  available/not installed
✗  failed item
✓  success (use sparingly — not all terminals render it well)

Selection criteria:

  • ASCII for tools that run in CI or piped contexts
  • Unicode for tools with interactive terminal users
  • Offer both via a
    --ascii
    flag or
    NO_COLOR
    detection
  • Test glyphs in: macOS Terminal, Windows Terminal, VS Code terminal, SSH sessions

Expected: A glyph set that communicates status at a glance without relying on color alone.

On failure: If a glyph renders as

?
or a box in testing, replace with the ASCII equivalent. The
+/-/=/!
set works everywhere.

Step 3: Design Verbosity Levels

Every command should support four output levels:

LevelFlagAudienceContent
Default(none)Human at terminalFormatted, colored, informative
Verbose
--verbose
or
--ceremonial
Human wanting detailPer-item breakdown, arrival sequences
Quiet
--quiet
Scripts, CIMinimal lines, status icons, no decoration
JSON
--json
Machine consumersStructured, parseable, complete

Implementation pattern:

function output(data, options) {
  if (options.json) {
    console.log(JSON.stringify(data, null, 2));
    return;
  }
  if (options.quiet) {
    for (const item of data.items) {
      const icon = item.ok ? '+' : '!';
      console.log(`${icon} ${item.id}`);
    }
    return;
  }
  // Default (or verbose) human output
  printFormatted(data, { verbose: options.verbose });
}

JSON output rules:

  • Always valid JSON (no mixing with human text)
  • Include all data the human output shows, plus machine-useful fields
  • Use consistent key naming across commands
  • Exit code 0 for success, 1 for errors (regardless of output mode)

Expected: Four clear output levels with consistent behavior across commands.

On failure: If verbose mode is too noisy, make it opt-in (

--ceremonial
) rather than a graduated verbosity level.

Step 4: Establish Voice Rules

Define the tone and style that all output functions follow. This prevents inconsistency across commands.

Example voice rules (from the campfire reporter):

  1. Present tense, active voice: "mystic arrives" not "mystic has been installed"
  2. No exclamation marks: Quiet confidence. The tool doesn't shout.
  3. Metaphor replaces jargon: "practices" not "dependencies" (only for ceremony mode)
  4. Failures are honest, not catastrophic: "A spark was lost" not "ERROR: installation failed with exit code 1"
  5. Closing line reflects state: Every operation ends with a status summary
  6. No emoji: Unicode glyphs carry visual weight without being decorative
  7. Every word carries information: If a word doesn't add understanding, remove it

Voice rules for standard (non-ceremony) output:

  • Concise, factual lines
  • Status icon + item ID + context
  • Summary line with counts
  • Error messages suggest corrective actions

Expected: A written set of 3-7 voice rules that output functions must follow.

On failure: If rules feel arbitrary, test them: write the same output with and without each rule. If removing a rule doesn't change the output quality, the rule isn't needed.

Step 5: Implement Reporter Functions

Organize output into a reporter module with focused functions:

// reporter.js — standard output
export function printResults(results) { ... }
export function printItemTable(items) { ... }
export function printDetections(detections) { ... }
export function printAudit(auditResults) { ... }
export function printDryRun() { ... }
export function warn(msg) { ... }
export function error(msg) { ... }
export { chalk };

Each function follows the same structure:

  1. Handle empty/null input gracefully
  2. Compute layout (column widths, padding)
  3. Output with palette colors
  4. Summary line at the bottom

For ceremony output, create a separate module:

// campfire-reporter.js — warm narrative output
export function printArrival({ teamId, agents, results, ceremonial }) { ... }
export function printScatter({ teamId, agents, results }) { ... }
export function printTend(fires) { ... }
export function printCampfireList({ teams, state, reg }) { ... }
export function printFireSummary({ team, fireData, reg }) { ... }
export function printJson(data) { ... }

Expected: Reporter functions that are independently usable — each handles its own formatting without depending on caller state.

On failure: If functions grow beyond ~50 lines, extract helpers. A reporter function should be easy to review in isolation.

Step 6: Test Output Across Environments

Verify output renders correctly in different contexts:

# With colors (interactive terminal)
node cli/index.js list --domains

# Without colors (piped)
node cli/index.js list --domains | cat

# With NO_COLOR environment variable
NO_COLOR=1 node cli/index.js list --domains

# JSON mode (parseable)
node cli/index.js campfire --json | jq .

# In CI (typically no TTY)
CI=true node cli/index.js audit

Check for:

  • Colors display correctly in interactive mode
  • No ANSI escape codes leak into piped/redirected output
  • JSON is valid (pipe to
    jq .
    to verify)
  • Unicode glyphs render in the target terminals
  • Column alignment holds with varying content widths

Expected: Output is correct in all five contexts.

On failure: If ANSI codes leak, ensure chalk respects

NO_COLOR
. If Unicode breaks, provide an ASCII fallback mode.

Validation

  • Color palette has a no-color fallback
  • Status indicators work in both color and no-color modes
  • All four verbosity levels produce useful output
  • JSON output is valid and parseable by
    jq
  • Voice rules are documented and followed consistently
  • Reporter functions handle empty/null input gracefully
  • Output tested in: terminal, piped, NO_COLOR, CI

Common Pitfalls

  • Mixing human text with JSON: In
    --json
    mode, output only valid JSON. A single stray line (like "DRY RUN") breaks JSON parsers. If the command must show both, separate them clearly or suppress the human text in JSON mode.
  • Hardcoded column widths: Content length varies. Use
    Math.max(...items.map(i => i.id.length))
    to compute padding dynamically.
  • Color without meaning: If color is the only way to distinguish success from failure, colorblind users and piped output lose information. Always pair color with a text indicator (
    +
    ,
    OK
    ,
    ERR
    ).
  • Ceremony in the wrong context: Warm narrative output is appropriate for interactive terminal sessions. In CI, scripts, or
    --quiet
    mode, it adds noise. Gate ceremony output behind explicit flags.
  • Forgetting the summary line: Users scan the last line first. Every operation should end with a one-line summary (counts of success/failure/skipped).

Related Skills

  • scaffold-cli-command
    — the commands that use this output
  • test-cli-application
    — testing that output matches expectations
  • build-cli-plugin
    — plugins report results through this output system