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scaffold-cli-command

pjt222
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Über

Diese Fähigkeit erstellt ein neues Commander.js CLI-Kommando mit strukturierten Optionen, einem Aktions-Handler und drei Ausgabemodi (menschenlesbar, leise, JSON). Sie hilft Entwicklern, ein Kommando zu einer bestehenden CLI hinzuzufügen, ein neues Tool von Grund auf zu entwerfen oder die Struktur über eine Multi-Kommando-CLI zu standardisieren. Der generierte Code umfasst gemeinsame Kontextmuster, Fehlerbehandlung und Anleitungen für Integrationstests.

Schnellinstallation

Claude Code

Empfohlen
Primär
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Plugin-BefehlAlternativ
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternativ
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/scaffold-cli-command

Kopieren Sie diesen Befehl und fügen Sie ihn in Claude Code ein, um diese Fähigkeit zu installieren

Dokumentation

Scaffold a CLI Command

Add a new command to a Commander.js CLI with consistent option handling, three output modes, and integration tests.

When to Use

  • Adding a new command to an existing Commander.js CLI
  • Designing a multi-command CLI tool from scratch
  • Standardizing command structure so all commands follow the same patterns
  • Adding a "ceremony" variant that replaces machine output with warm narrative

Inputs

  • Required: Command name and verb (e.g., gather, audit, sync)
  • Required: What the command does (one sentence)
  • Required: Path to CLI entry point (e.g., cli/index.js)
  • Optional: Whether the command needs a ceremony variant
  • Optional: Custom options beyond the standard set
  • Optional: Subcommand arguments (positional args like <name> or [names...])

Procedure

Step 1: Choose the Command Name and Category

Select a verb that communicates the command's action. Group commands into categories:

CategoryVerbsPattern
CRUDinstall, uninstall, list, searchOperates on content
Lifecycleinit, sync, auditManages project state
Ceremonygather, scatter, tend, campfireWarm narrative output

Naming conventions:

  • Single verb (not install-skill — let options specify what)
  • Lowercase, no hyphens in the command name itself
  • Positional args: <required> or [optional] or [variadic...]
program
  .command('gather <name>')
  .description('Gather a team around the campfire')

Got: A command name, description, and positional args defined.

If fail: If the verb overlaps an existing command, either compose them (add an option to the existing command) or differentiate clearly in the description.

Step 2: Define Options

Every command should support a standard set of shared options plus command-specific ones.

Standard options (include as needed):

  .option('-n, --dry-run', 'Preview without making changes')
  .option('-q, --quiet', 'Suppress human-readable output')
  .option('--json', 'Output as JSON')
  .option('-f, --framework <id>', 'Target specific framework')
  .option('-g, --global', 'Use global scope')
  .option('--scope <scope>', 'Scope: project, workspace, global', 'project')
  .option('--source <path>', 'Path to tool root directory')

Command-specific options — add only what the command needs:

  .option('--ceremonial', 'Show each item arriving individually')
  .option('--only <items>', 'Comma-separated subset to include')
  .option('-y, --yes', 'Skip confirmation prompts')

Design rules:

  • Short flags (-n) for frequently used options
  • Long flags (--dry-run) for clarity
  • Default values as third argument where appropriate
  • Boolean flags (no argument) for toggles

Got: A complete option chain with both standard and custom options.

If fail: If too many options accumulate (>8), consider splitting into subcommands or grouping related options.

Step 3: Implement the Action Handler

The action handler follows a consistent pattern:

.action(async (name, options) => {
  // 1. Get shared context (registries, adapters, paths)
  const ctx = getContext(options);

  // 2. Resolve what to operate on
  const items = resolveItems(ctx, name, options);
  if (!items || items.length === 0) {
    reporter.error('Nothing found.');
    process.exit(1);
  }

  // 3. Preview if dry-run
  if (options.dryRun) reporter.printDryRun();

  // 4. Execute the operation
  const results = await executeOperation(items, ctx, options);

  // 5. Output results (3 modes)
  if (options.json) {
    console.log(JSON.stringify(results, null, 2));
  } else if (options.quiet) {
    reporter.printResults(results);
  } else {
    printHumanOutput(results, options);
  }
})

The getContext() shared helper centralizes:

  • Root directory detection
  • Registry loading
  • Framework detection or explicit selection
  • Scope resolution

Got: An action handler that follows the 5-step pattern: context → resolve → preview → execute → output.

If fail: If the command doesn't fit the resolve-then-execute pattern (e.g., purely informational like detect), simplify to: context → compute → output.

Step 4: Add the Three Output Modes

Every command should support three output modes:

Default (human-readable):

Installing 3 item(s) to Claude Code...

  + create-skill [claude-code] .claude/skills/create-skill
  + write-tests  [claude-code] .claude/skills/write-tests
  = commit-changes [claude-code] (skipped)

  2 installed, 1 skipped

Quiet (--quiet): Standard reporter output — concise lines with status icons (+, -, =, !), no ceremony, no decoration.

JSON (--json):

{
  "command": "install",
  "items": 3,
  "installed": 2,
  "skipped": 1,
  "failed": 0
}

Implementation pattern:

if (options.json) {
  console.log(JSON.stringify(data, null, 2));
  return;
}
if (options.quiet) {
  reporter.printResults(results);
  return;
}
// Default: human-readable output
printHumanReadable(results, options);

Got: All three modes produce useful output. JSON is parseable. Quiet is concise. Default is informative.

If fail: If the command has no meaningful JSON representation (e.g., detect), skip the JSON mode and document why.

Step 5: Add Ceremony Variant (Optional)

For commands that benefit from warm, narrative output instead of transactional reporting:

if (options.json) {
  ceremonyReporter.printJson(data);
} else if (options.quiet) {
  reporter.printResults(results);
} else {
  ceremonyReporter.printArrival({
    teamId: name,
    agents,
    results: { installed, skipped, failed },
    ceremonial: options.ceremonial || false,
  });
}

Ceremony output follows voice rules:

  1. Present tense, active voice ("mystic arrives", not "mystic was installed")
  2. No exclamation marks
  3. Metaphor replaces jargon ("practices" not "dependencies")
  4. Failures are honest, not catastrophic ("a spark was lost")
  5. Closing line reflects state ("The fire burns.")
  6. No emoji — use Unicode glyphs (✦ ◉ ◎ ○ ✗)
  7. Every word must carry information

See design-cli-output for detailed terminal output patterns.

Got: Ceremony output that follows all voice rules and produces warm, informative narratives.

If fail: If ceremony output feels forced or adds no information beyond the standard output, skip it. Not every command needs a ceremony variant.

Step 6: Handle Errors and Edge Cases

// Unknown item
if (!item) {
  reporter.error(`Unknown: ${name}. Use 'tool list' to browse.`);
  process.exit(1);
}

// Confirmation for destructive actions
if (!options.yes && !options.quiet && !options.dryRun) {
  const answer = await askYesNo('Proceed?');
  if (!answer) {
    console.log('  Cancelled.');
    return;
  }
}

// State validation
if (!state.fires[name]) {
  reporter.error(`Not active. Nothing to remove.`);
  process.exit(1);
}

Error design principles:

  • Error messages suggest the corrective action
  • process.exit(1) for unrecoverable errors
  • Confirmation prompts for destructive operations (bypass with --yes)
  • Dry-run always succeeds (never blocks on confirmation)

Got: All error paths produce helpful messages. Destructive operations require confirmation.

If fail: If confirmation prompts interfere with scripting, ensure --yes and --quiet both bypass them.

Step 7: Write Integration Tests

import { describe, it, after } from 'node:test';
import assert from 'node:assert/strict';
import { execSync } from 'child_process';

const CLI = 'node cli/index.js';
function run(args) {
  return execSync(`${CLI} ${args}`, { encoding: 'utf8', timeout: 10000 });
}

describe('new-command', () => {
  after(() => { /* cleanup created files/state */ });

  it('dry-run shows preview', () => {
    const out = run('new-command arg --dry-run');
    assert.match(out, /DRY RUN/);
  });

  it('--json outputs valid JSON', () => {
    const out = run('new-command arg --json');
    const start = out.indexOf('{');
    const data = JSON.parse(out.slice(start));
    assert.equal(data.command, 'new-command');
  });

  it('rejects unknown input', () => {
    assert.throws(() => run('new-command nonexistent'), /Unknown/);
  });
});

See test-cli-application for comprehensive CLI testing patterns.

Got: At least 3 tests: dry-run, JSON output, error case. More for complex commands.

If fail: If execSync times out, increase the timeout or check for interactive prompts blocking the command.

Validation

  • Command registered in CLI entry point and appears in --help
  • Standard options (--dry-run, --quiet, --json) work correctly
  • Default output is human-readable and informative
  • JSON output is valid and parseable
  • Error messages suggest corrective actions
  • Destructive operations require confirmation (bypassed by --yes)
  • At least 3 integration tests pass
  • Command follows the getContext → resolve → execute → output pattern

Pitfalls

  • Forgetting the JSON mode: Machine consumers (scripts, CI) depend on structured output. Always implement --json even if the command seems interactive-only.
  • Confirmation prompts blocking scripts: Any command that prompts for input will hang in non-interactive contexts. Always provide --yes for destructive commands and ensure --quiet suppresses prompts.
  • Inconsistent error exit codes: Use process.exit(1) for all errors. Tools that parse CLI output check exit codes first.
  • Options without defaults: Options like --scope should have sensible defaults so users don't need to specify them every time.
  • Leaking ceremony into quiet mode: The --quiet flag means "minimal output for machines." If ceremony text leaks into quiet mode, scripts will break on unexpected output.

Related Skills

  • build-cli-plugin — build the adapter/plugin that commands operate on
  • test-cli-application — comprehensive CLI testing patterns beyond the basics in Step 7
  • design-cli-output — terminal output design for all verbosity levels
  • install-almanac-content — example of a well-structured CLI command skill

GitHub Repository

pjt222/agent-almanac
Pfad: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/scaffold-cli-command
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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