scaffold-cli-command
About
This skill scaffolds a new Commander.js CLI command with structured options, an action handler, and three output modes (human-readable, quiet, JSON). It helps developers add a command to an existing CLI, design a new tool from scratch, or standardize structure across a multi-command CLI. The generated code includes shared context patterns, error handling, and integration testing guidance.
Quick Install
Claude Code
Recommendednpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/scaffold-cli-commandCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
Documentation
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:
| Category | Verbs | Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| CRUD | install, uninstall, list, search | Operates on content |
| Lifecycle | init, sync, audit | Manages project state |
| Ceremony | gather, scatter, tend, campfire | Warm 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:
- Present tense, active voice ("mystic arrives", not "mystic was installed")
- No exclamation marks
- Metaphor replaces jargon ("practices" not "dependencies")
- Failures are honest, not catastrophic ("a spark was lost")
- Closing line reflects state ("The fire burns.")
- No emoji — use Unicode glyphs (✦ ◉ ◎ ○ ✗)
- 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
--jsoneven if the command seems interactive-only. - Confirmation prompts blocking scripts: Any command that prompts for input will hang in non-interactive contexts. Always provide
--yesfor destructive commands and ensure--quietsuppresses 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
--scopeshould have sensible defaults so users don't need to specify them every time. - Leaking ceremony into quiet mode: The
--quietflag 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 ontest-cli-application— comprehensive CLI testing patterns beyond the basics in Step 7design-cli-output— terminal output design for all verbosity levelsinstall-almanac-content— example of a well-structured CLI command skill
GitHub Repository
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