Back to Skills

sdk-dx

jonathimer
Updated 2 days ago
7 views
76
4
76
View on GitHub
Metaapidesign

About

This skill helps developers design SDKs with exceptional developer experience (DX) that drive adoption. It covers creating APIs that feel native, with guided error messages, type safety, and reduced friction. Use it for guidance on SDK design, versioning, migration, and IDE integration best practices.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Primary
npx skills add jonathimer/devmarketing-skills -a claude-code
Plugin CommandAlternative
/plugin add https://github.com/jonathimer/devmarketing-skills
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/jonathimer/devmarketing-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/sdk-dx

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

Documentation

SDK Design and Developer Experience

The best SDK marketing is an SDK that developers can't stop talking about. When your SDK makes developers feel productive and competent, they become your advocates. When it frustrates them, no amount of marketing will save you.

Overview

SDK developer experience (DX) encompasses everything a developer feels when using your library:

  • Discovery: How easily can they find and install it?
  • Learning: How quickly can they understand how to use it?
  • Using: How productive are they day-to-day?
  • Debugging: How easily can they fix problems?
  • Upgrading: How painlessly can they adopt new versions?

Great SDK DX is a competitive advantage. Developers choose tools that make them feel smart.

Before You Start

Review the developer-audience-context skill to understand:

  • What languages and frameworks do your target developers use?
  • What IDE/editor setups are most common?
  • What's their experience level with your problem domain?
  • What competing SDKs have they used? What do they like/dislike?

SDK design decisions should flow from deep understanding of your users.

API Design Principles

Principle 1: Optimize for the Common Case

The most frequent use case should require the least code.

Good Design:

# Common case: send a simple message
client.messages.send("Hello world", to="+1234567890")

# Full control when needed
client.messages.send(
    body="Hello world",
    to="+1234567890",
    from_="+0987654321",
    status_callback="https://...",
    media_urls=["https://..."]
)

Bad Design:

# Every call requires full configuration
message = Message(
    body="Hello world",
    to=PhoneNumber("+1234567890"),
    from_=PhoneNumber(config.get_default_from()),
    options=MessageOptions(
        status_callback=None,
        media_urls=[]
    )
)
client.messages.send(message)

Principle 2: Progressive Disclosure

Start simple, reveal complexity as needed.

// Level 1: Simplest possible usage
const result = await client.analyze("Hello world");

// Level 2: Common options
const result = await client.analyze("Hello world", {
  language: "en",
  features: ["sentiment", "entities"]
});

// Level 3: Full control
const result = await client.analyze("Hello world", {
  language: "en",
  features: ["sentiment", "entities"],
  model: "v2-large",
  timeout: 30000,
  retries: { max: 3, backoff: "exponential" }
});

Principle 3: Fail Fast and Clearly

Catch errors as early as possible, with actionable messages.

Good:

# Validation at construction time
client = MyClient(api_key="")
# Raises immediately: ValueError: API key cannot be empty.
# Get your API key at https://dashboard.example.com/keys

# Clear error at runtime
client.users.get("invalid-id")
# Raises: NotFoundError: User 'invalid-id' not found.
# Use client.users.list() to see available users.

Bad:

client = MyClient(api_key="")  # No validation
result = client.users.get("invalid-id")
# Returns: None (is this an error? empty result? who knows?)
# Or worse: raises generic Exception with stack trace

Principle 4: Sensible Defaults

Default values should work for most cases without configuration.

// This should just work without configuration
const client = new MyClient({ apiKey: process.env.MY_API_KEY });

// Sensible defaults:
// - Automatic retries with exponential backoff
// - Reasonable timeouts
// - JSON content type
// - Standard auth headers
// - Connection pooling

Error Messages That Guide

Error messages are documentation. Make them helpful.

The Error Message Framework

Every error message should answer:

  1. What happened?
  2. Why did it happen?
  3. How do I fix it?

Good vs. Bad Error Messages

Good:

AuthenticationError: Invalid API key provided.

The API key 'sk_test_abc...' (test key) cannot be used for
production requests.

To fix this:
1. Go to https://dashboard.example.com/keys
2. Copy your production API key (starts with 'sk_live_')
3. Update your environment variable: MY_API_KEY=sk_live_...

Docs: https://docs.example.com/authentication

Bad:

Error: 401 Unauthorized

Error Types to Distinguish

Create specific error types that developers can catch:

from myapi.errors import (
    AuthenticationError,  # Invalid/missing credentials
    AuthorizationError,   # Valid creds, insufficient permissions
    ValidationError,      # Invalid input data
    NotFoundError,        # Resource doesn't exist
    RateLimitError,       # Too many requests
    ServerError,          # Our fault, retry might help
)

try:
    client.users.get(user_id)
except NotFoundError as e:
    # Handle missing user specifically
except AuthenticationError as e:
    # Handle auth issues specifically
except MyAPIError as e:
    # Catch-all for other API errors

Include Context in Errors

// Bad: generic error
throw new Error("Invalid parameter");

// Good: contextual error
throw new ValidationError({
  message: "Invalid phone number format",
  field: "to",
  value: "+1abc",
  expected: "E.164 format (e.g., +14155551234)",
  docs: "https://docs.example.com/phone-numbers"
});

Type Safety

Type safety is documentation that never goes stale.

TypeScript Best Practices

// Define explicit types for all inputs and outputs
interface User {
  id: string;
  email: string;
  name: string;
  createdAt: Date;
  metadata?: Record<string, unknown>;
}

interface CreateUserInput {
  email: string;
  name: string;
  metadata?: Record<string, unknown>;
}

// Return types are explicit
async function createUser(input: CreateUserInput): Promise<User> {
  // ...
}

// Use discriminated unions for responses
type ApiResponse<T> =
  | { success: true; data: T }
  | { success: false; error: ApiError };

Autocomplete-Driven Design

Design for IDE autocomplete:

// Good: autocomplete shows all options
client.messages.create({
  to: "+1...",     // IDE shows: (property) to: string
  body: "...",    // IDE shows: (property) body: string
  // User types 'me' and sees 'mediaUrls' autocomplete
});

// Bad: requires memorization
client.send("messages", { /* what goes here? */ });

Enum and Literal Types

// Good: constrained values with autocomplete
type MessageStatus = "queued" | "sending" | "sent" | "failed";

interface Message {
  status: MessageStatus;  // IDE shows valid values
}

// Bad: any string accepted
interface Message {
  status: string;  // No guidance, errors at runtime
}

IDE Integration

Make Discovery Easy

Structure your SDK so IDE features help developers:

// Namespace methods logically
client.users.get(id)
client.users.list()
client.users.create(data)
client.users.update(id, data)
client.users.delete(id)

// After typing 'client.users.' the IDE shows all user operations

JSDoc/Docstrings Everywhere

/**
 * Creates a new user in your organization.
 *
 * @param input - The user details
 * @param input.email - Must be a valid email address
 * @param input.name - Display name (max 100 characters)
 * @returns The created user with generated ID
 * @throws {ValidationError} If email format is invalid
 * @throws {ConflictError} If email already exists
 *
 * @example
 * const user = await client.users.create({
 *   email: "[email protected]",
 *   name: "Jane Developer"
 * });
 */
async createUser(input: CreateUserInput): Promise<User>

Inline Examples

def send_message(self, body: str, to: str, **kwargs) -> Message:
    """
    Send an SMS message.

    Args:
        body: The message content (max 1600 characters)
        to: Recipient phone number in E.164 format

    Returns:
        Message object with ID and status

    Example:
        >>> message = client.messages.send(
        ...     body="Hello from Python!",
        ...     to="+14155551234"
        ... )
        >>> print(message.status)
        'queued'
    """

Versioning Strategy

Semantic Versioning

Follow semver strictly:

  • MAJOR: Breaking changes (removal, signature changes)
  • MINOR: New features (backward compatible)
  • PATCH: Bug fixes (backward compatible)

What Constitutes a Breaking Change

Breaking changes (require major version bump):

  • Removing a public method or property
  • Changing method signatures
  • Changing return types
  • Changing default behavior
  • Removing support for a language/runtime version

Not breaking (minor or patch):

  • Adding new methods
  • Adding optional parameters
  • Deprecating (but not removing) features
  • Bug fixes that change incorrect behavior

Deprecation Process

import warnings

def old_method(self):
    """
    .. deprecated:: 2.3.0
       Use :meth:`new_method` instead. Will be removed in 3.0.0.
    """
    warnings.warn(
        "old_method() is deprecated, use new_method() instead. "
        "See migration guide: https://docs.example.com/migrate-v3",
        DeprecationWarning,
        stacklevel=2
    )
    return self.new_method()

Migration Guides

Migration Guide Structure

# Migrating from v2 to v3

## Overview
Version 3 introduces [major change] and removes [deprecated feature].
Migration typically takes [time estimate].

## Breaking Changes

### 1. Client Initialization
**Before (v2):**
```python
client = MyClient(key="...")

After (v3):

client = MyClient(api_key="...")

Why: Consistency with other SDK parameters.

2. [Next breaking change]

...

Deprecated Features Removed

  • client.old_method() - Use client.new_method() instead
  • LegacyClass - Use ModernClass instead

New Features

  • [Feature that makes migration worthwhile]

Need Help?

  • [Migration support channel]
  • [Office hours for migration questions]

### Codemods and Automation

When possible, provide automated migration:

```bash
# Provide migration scripts
npx @myapi/migrate-v3

# Or codemods
npx jscodeshift -t @myapi/codemods/v2-to-v3 src/

Making SDKs Feel Native

Language Idioms

Python: Use snake_case, context managers, generators

# Pythonic
with client.batch() as batch:
    for user in client.users.list():
        batch.add(user.send_notification("Hello"))

# Not Pythonic
users = client.getUsers()
batch = client.createBatch()
for i in range(len(users)):
    batch.addOperation(users[i].sendNotification("Hello"))
batch.execute()

JavaScript: Use Promises, async/await, destructuring

// Idiomatic JS
const { data, error } = await client.users.get(id);

// Not idiomatic
client.users.get(id, function(err, result) {
    if (err) { /* callback hell */ }
});

Go: Use error returns, interfaces, channels

// Idiomatic Go
user, err := client.Users.Get(ctx, userID)
if err != nil {
    return fmt.Errorf("getting user: %w", err)
}

// Not idiomatic
user := client.Users.Get(userID)  // panics on error

Match Ecosystem Conventions

  • Use the package manager developers expect (npm, pip, gem, go get)
  • Follow naming conventions of popular libraries in that language
  • Integrate with popular frameworks (Express, Django, Rails)
  • Support popular testing patterns

SDK Quality Checklist

Before Release

  • All public APIs have documentation
  • All public APIs have types (where language supports)
  • Error messages include remediation steps
  • Code examples in docs are tested automatically
  • Changelog is updated with all changes
  • Migration guide for breaking changes
  • Deprecation warnings for removed features

For Great DX

  • Quickstart achieves success in < 5 minutes
  • IDE autocomplete works for all operations
  • Errors are catchable by specific type
  • Retry logic handles transient failures
  • Logging is configurable and useful
  • Debug mode shows request/response details

Tools

SDK Generation

  • OpenAPI Generator: Generate SDKs from OpenAPI specs
  • Swagger Codegen: Alternative generator
  • Speakeasy: Modern SDK generation platform
  • Fern: Type-safe SDK generation

Testing

  • VCR/Betamax: Record and replay HTTP interactions
  • WireMock: Mock HTTP services
  • Pact: Contract testing

Documentation

  • TypeDoc: TypeScript documentation
  • Sphinx: Python documentation
  • GoDoc: Go documentation
  • YARD: Ruby documentation

Related Skills

  • docs-as-marketing: Documentation that showcases SDK capabilities
  • api-onboarding: First experience with your SDK
  • changelog-updates: Communicating SDK changes effectively
  • developer-sandbox: Try SDK without installing
  • developer-audience-context: Understanding SDK users

GitHub Repository

jonathimer/devmarketing-skills
Path: skills/sdk-dx
0

Related Skills

content-collections

Meta

This skill provides a production-tested setup for Content Collections, a TypeScript-first tool that transforms Markdown/MDX files into type-safe data collections with Zod validation. Use it when building blogs, documentation sites, or content-heavy Vite + React applications to ensure type safety and automatic content validation. It covers everything from Vite plugin configuration and MDX compilation to deployment optimization and schema validation.

View skill

polymarket

Meta

This skill enables developers to build applications with the Polymarket prediction markets platform, including API integration for trading and market data. It also provides real-time data streaming via WebSocket to monitor live trades and market activity. Use it for implementing trading strategies or creating tools that process live market updates.

View skill

creating-opencode-plugins

Meta

This skill helps developers create OpenCode plugins that hook into 25+ event types like commands, files, and LSP operations. It provides the plugin structure, event API specifications, and implementation patterns for JavaScript/TypeScript modules. Use it when you need to intercept, monitor, or extend the OpenCode AI assistant's lifecycle with custom event-driven logic.

View skill

sglang

Meta

SGLang is a high-performance LLM serving framework that specializes in fast, structured generation for JSON, regex, and agentic workflows using its RadixAttention prefix caching. It delivers significantly faster inference, especially for tasks with repeated prefixes, making it ideal for complex, structured outputs and multi-turn conversations. Choose SGLang over alternatives like vLLM when you need constrained decoding or are building applications with extensive prefix sharing.

View skill