swiftui-design-skill
About
This skill helps developers design distinctive, high-quality SwiftUI interfaces that avoid generic AI-generated patterns. It provides guidance on design direction, layout, typography, and a structured review process for views, prototypes, and app aesthetics. Use it when creating or refining SwiftUI screens to ensure they look intentionally crafted.
Quick Install
Claude Code
Recommendednpx skills add wholiver/swiftui-design-skill -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/wholiver/swiftui-design-skillgit clone https://github.com/wholiver/swiftui-design-skill.git ~/.claude/skills/swiftui-design-skillCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
Documentation
SwiftUI Design Skill
TL;DR: Design SwiftUI apps that look intentionally crafted, not AI-generated. Follow the 6 Anti-Slop Rules, use the Design Direction workflow when requirements are vague, and always pass the 5-Dimension Review before shipping.
When to Use
- Designing new SwiftUI views or screens from scratch
- Reviewing or improving existing UI quality
- Creating iOS app prototypes or mockups
- Choosing a visual style or design direction
- Integrating brand assets into SwiftUI
- When someone says "the UI looks generic" or "make it look better"
- When building a new feature that needs visual design
When NOT to Use
- Pure backend / API work with no UI
- Fixing SwiftUI compilation errors (use swiftui-expert-skill instead)
- Performance optimization of existing views (use swiftui-expert-skill)
- Accessibility compliance only (use swiftui-expert-skill's accessibility topic)
Prerequisites
- Xcode 16+ with iOS 18+ / macOS 15+ SDK
- SwiftUI framework (not UIKit unless explicitly requested)
- Familiarity with SwiftUI view hierarchy and modifiers
Core Design Philosophy
These 6 principles guide every design decision. They are distilled from real-world design practice and anti-patterns observed in AI-generated UI.
Principle 1: Start From Context, Never Blank
Before designing any screen, ask:
- Is there an existing design system, UI kit, or Figma file?
- Is there an existing codebase with established visual language?
- Are there brand guidelines or a style guide?
If no context exists, create a brand-spec.md first (see Brand Asset Protocol below).
Principle 2: Junior Designer Mode — Hypothesize Early, Iterate Fast
Don't wait for the "perfect" design. Show hypotheses with placeholders early:
- Gray boxes for images are better than bad AI-generated SVGs
- System fonts with good spacing > custom fonts with bad spacing
- A rough but honest layout > a polished but generic one
Principle 3: Offer Variations, Not Finals
Always present 2-3 distinct design directions, not one "final answer." Each variation should:
- Represent a different design philosophy (e.g., editorial, functional, expressive)
- Have a clear rationale for why it works
- Be visually distinct — not just color swaps
Principle 4: Placeholder > Bad Implementation
If you cannot source a real asset (icon, image, illustration):
- Use a clean gray placeholder with clear labeling
- Never use AI-generated SVG clipart
- Never use emoji as icon substitutes in production UI
- For icons, prefer SF Symbols (Apple's built-in icon library)
Principle 5: System First, Don't Fill
Every element must earn its place. Before adding any UI element, ask:
- Does this serve the user's goal?
- Can this be combined with something else?
- What happens if I remove it?
Whitespace is a feature, not emptiness.
Principle 6: Anti-AI-Slop
These patterns are banned in production UI. See references/anti-ai-slop.md for detailed rules.
Banned visual patterns:
- ❌ Purple-to-blue gradient backgrounds
- ❌ Emoji as functional icons
- ❌ Rounded cards with left-border accent color
- ❌ Generic "hero section" with centered text over gradient
- ❌ Inter/Roboto as display fonts on Apple platforms
- ❌ Neon-on-dark "cyber" aesthetic (#0D1117 base)
- ❌ Symmetric 3-column feature grids
- ❌ AI-drawn SVG illustrations or CSS silhouettes
What to do instead:
- ✅ Single warm accent color on neutral background
- ✅ SF Symbols for icons, or custom icon set
- ✅ Serif display font (e.g., New York, Georgia) for headings
- ✅ Restrained info density — let content breathe
- ✅ One signature detail at 120% effort per screen
- ✅ Real photography or clean placeholders
Brand Asset Protocol
When building UI for a specific brand, follow this 5-step hard flow:
- Ask — Request brand guidelines, logo files, color palette, typography
- Search — If not provided, search the web for "[brand name] brand guidelines"
- Download — Get actual asset files (PNG/SVG logos, font files)
- Verify — Confirm colors match official sources (check hex values)
- Write brand-spec.md — Document: primary/secondary colors, fonts, logo usage rules, spacing tokens
Quality threshold: 5 real brand colors, 10 verified design tokens, 2 font families, 8pt spacing grid.
If no brand exists, create a brand-spec.md with:
- 1 primary accent color (warm, not purple-blue gradient)
- 1 neutral palette (grays with warm undertone)
- 1 display font + 1 body font (SF Pro default is fine)
- 8pt spacing grid
Design Direction Workflow
When requirements are vague or the user asks "what style should we use?", follow this workflow:
Phase 1: Understand Context (5 min)
- Ask: What is the app? Who is the user? What platform (iOS/macOS/watchOS)?
- Ask: Any reference apps or websites they admire?
- Check: Existing design system or brand assets?
Phase 2: Recommend 3 Directions
Present 3 distinct design philosophies from different schools:
| School | Example Directions |
|---|---|
| Information | Clean data-first, chart-heavy, Bloomberg-style |
| Editorial | Magazine layout, serif typography, generous whitespace |
| Expressive | Bold color, asymmetric layout, motion-forward |
| Functional | Dense utility, monospace accents, minimal decoration |
| Warm Minimal | Soft neutrals, rounded shapes, subtle texture |
Phase 3: Present Visual Anchors
For each direction, describe:
- Color palette (3-5 colors with hex values)
- Typography pairing (display + body)
- Layout density (comfortable / compact / spacious)
- Signature detail (one standout element per screen)
Phase 4: Let User Choose
Present options clearly. After choice, lock in the design system.
SwiftUI Design Workflow
Step 1: Define the Design System (Before Coding)
Create or confirm these design tokens:
// Requires: references/swift-extensions.md (Color(hex:) extension)
// DesignTokens.swift
enum DesignTokens {
// Colors
static let accent = Color(hex: "E85D3A") // Warm coral
static let background = Color(hex: "FAFAF8") // Warm white
static let textPrimary = Color(hex: "1A1A1A") // Near-black
static let textSecondary = Color(hex: "6B6B6B") // Muted gray
// Typography
static let displayFont = "New York" // Serif for headings
static let bodyFont = "SF Pro" // System default
// Spacing (8pt grid)
static let spaceXS: CGFloat = 4
static let spaceS: CGFloat = 8
static let spaceM: CGFloat = 16
static let spaceL: CGFloat = 24
static let spaceXL: CGFloat = 32
static let spaceXXL: CGFloat = 48
// Corner radius
static let radiusS: CGFloat = 8
static let radiusM: CGFloat = 12
static let radiusL: CGFloat = 16
}
Step 2: Build the Layout Hierarchy
Follow the layout patterns in references/layout-patterns.md:
- Start with the primary content container
- Use
VStackfor vertical flow,HStackfor horizontal - Use
LazyVGrid/LazyHGridfor grid layouts - Use
ScrollViewwith.scrollTargetBehavior(.paging)for paged content - Avoid
GeometryReader— prefercontainerRelativeFrame(iOS 17+)
Step 3: Apply Typography Hierarchy
Follow references/typography-color.md:
- Display (screen titles): Serif font, 28-34pt, bold
- Heading (section titles): Sans-serif, 20-24pt, semibold
- Body (content text): Sans-serif, 15-17pt, regular
- Caption (labels, metadata): Sans-serif, 12-13pt, secondary color
Step 4: Add the Signature Detail
Each screen should have ONE element that goes 120% — a custom animation, a unique layout choice, a distinctive color moment. This is what makes the design memorable.
Examples:
- A custom pull-to-refresh with brand-colored animation
- A card that expands with a spring animation on tap
- A header that uses the brand's display font at an oversized scale
- A subtle parallax effect on scroll
Step 5: Review Against Checklist
Before shipping, run the 5-Dimension Review (see references/design-review.md).
Common Mistakes to Avoid
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
Using UIColor or NSColor | Use Color (SwiftUI native) |
UIScreen.main.bounds for sizing | Use containerRelativeFrame or geometry-based modifiers |
| Default blue tint everywhere | Define a custom accent color in design tokens |
| No spacing system (random padding values) | Use 8pt grid: 4, 8, 16, 24, 32, 48 |
| Emoji as icons | Use SF Symbols or custom icon assets |
| Purple-blue gradient background | Use solid warm neutrals |
| All content in one giant VStack | Break into semantic sections with clear hierarchy |
| No visual hierarchy (everything same size) | Use 3+ type scales (display, heading, body, caption) |
| Ignoring dark mode | Define semantic colors that adapt to appearance |
| Generic "Welcome!" hero section | Show actual content immediately |
Quick Reference: Topic Router
| Topic | Reference File |
|---|---|
| Anti-AI-Slop Rules (detail) | references/anti-ai-slop.md |
| Layout Patterns & Grids | references/layout-patterns.md |
| Typography & Color Systems | references/typography-color.md |
| 5-Dimension Design Review | references/design-review.md |
| Swift Extensions (required) | references/swift-extensions.md |
| Brand Spec Template | templates/brand-spec.md |
Validation Checklist
Before considering any SwiftUI design complete, verify:
- Design tokens defined (colors, fonts, spacing)
- No banned AI-slop patterns present
- Typography has clear hierarchy (3+ scales)
- Spacing follows 8pt grid
- Dark mode colors defined and tested
- One signature detail per screen
- SF Symbols used for icons (not emoji)
- Minimum 44×44pt tap targets
- No
GeometryReaderorUIScreen.main.bounds - 5-Dimension Review score ≥ 7/10 on all dimensions
GitHub Repository
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