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design-cli-output

pjt222
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Metadesign

About

This skill provides patterns for designing CLI output with features like color, Unicode icons, and multiple verbosity levels (human, JSON, quiet, verbose). It covers reporter architecture, status indicators, and cross-terminal compatibility. Use it when building a new CLI tool, adding narrative output, or standardizing output across commands.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Primary
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Plugin CommandAlternative
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/design-cli-output

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

Documentation

Design CLI Output

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

When Use

  • Build new reporter module for CLI tool
  • Add warm or narrative output alongside transactional output
  • Standardize output format across many commands
  • Design JSON machine output parallel to human output
  • Pick colors, glyphs, verbosity levels for new terminal tool

Inputs

  • Required: CLI tool name + primary audience (devs, operators, end users)
  • Required: Commands that need output formatting
  • Optional: Ceremony/narrative output variant wanted?
  • Optional: Brand constraints (color palette, tone)

Steps

Step 1: Set Color Palette

Use chalk. Make 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 rules:

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

Got: Palette object. Named entries. No-color fallback.

If fail: Chalk unavailable (piped, CI)? Proxy fallback returns strings unchanged. Test: NO_COLOR=1 env var.

Step 2: Pick Status Indicators

Unicode glyphs or ASCII chars for status.

ASCII (max compat):

+  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)

Rules:

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

Got: Glyph set communicates status at a glance. No color needed.

If fail: Glyph renders as ? or box? Swap for ASCII. +/-/=/! works everywhere.

Step 3: Design Verbosity Levels

Every command supports 4 output levels:

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

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 rules:

  • Always valid JSON (no mixing with human text)
  • Include all data human output shows, plus machine fields
  • Consistent key names across commands
  • Exit 0 = success, 1 = err (any output mode)

Got: Four clear output levels. Consistent across commands.

If fail: Verbose too noisy? Make opt-in (--ceremonial) not graduated level.

Step 4: Set Voice Rules

Tone + style all output follows. Stops inconsistency.

Example voice rules (campfire reporter):

  1. Present tense, active voice: "mystic arrives" not "mystic has been installed"
  2. No exclamation marks: Quiet confidence. Tool doesn't shout.
  3. Metaphor replaces jargon: "practices" not "dependencies" (ceremony mode only)
  4. Failures honest, not catastrophic: "A spark was lost" not "ERROR: installation failed with exit code 1"
  5. Closing line shows state: Every op ends with status summary
  6. No emoji: Unicode glyphs carry visual weight without decoration
  7. Every word carries info: Word adds no understanding? Remove.

Voice rules for standard (non-ceremony) output:

  • Concise, factual lines
  • Status icon + item ID + context
  • Summary line with counts
  • Errors suggest fix

Got: Written set of 3-7 voice rules. Output funcs must follow.

If fail: Rules feel arbitrary? Test: write output with + without each rule. Removing rule doesn't change quality? Rule not needed.

Step 5: Build Reporter Functions

Organize output into reporter module. 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 same structure:

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

Ceremony output? 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) { ... }

Got: Reporter functions independently usable. Each handles own formatting, no caller state dep.

If fail: Function > ~50 lines? Extract helpers. Reporter must be reviewable alone.

Step 6: Test Output Across Environments

Check output renders right 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:

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

Got: Output correct in all 5 contexts.

If fail: ANSI codes leak? Ensure chalk respects NO_COLOR. Unicode breaks? Provide ASCII fallback mode.

Checks

  • Color palette has no-color fallback
  • Status indicators work in both color + no-color modes
  • All 4 verbosity levels produce useful output
  • JSON output valid, parseable by jq
  • Voice rules documented + followed
  • Reporter funcs handle empty/null input
  • Output tested in: terminal, piped, NO_COLOR, CI

Pitfalls

  • Mixing human text with JSON: In --json mode, only valid JSON. One stray line ("DRY RUN") breaks JSON parsers. If must show both, separate clearly or suppress human text in JSON mode.
  • Hardcoded column widths: Content length varies. Use Math.max(...items.map(i => i.id.length)) for dynamic padding.
  • Color without meaning: Color only way to tell success from failure? Colorblind users + piped output lose info. Always pair color with text indicator (+, OK, ERR).
  • Ceremony in wrong context: Warm narrative output fits interactive terminal. In CI, scripts, --quiet mode = noise. Gate ceremony behind explicit flags.
  • Forgetting summary line: Users scan last line first. Every op ends with one-line summary (counts of success/failure/skipped).

See Also

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

GitHub Repository

pjt222/agent-almanac
Path: i18n/caveman/skills/design-cli-output
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