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La habilidad `expo-native-ui` proporciona componentes de interfaz de usuario y pautas de estilo para crear aplicaciones Expo con sensación nativa y cumplimiento de las Directrices de Interfaz Humana de iOS. Incluye colores semánticos, controles nativos, SF Symbols, animaciones, efectos visuales y diseños responsivos. Utilice esto para la implementación de la interfaz de usuario junto con la habilidad separada `expo-router` para la navegación.
Instalación rápida
Claude Code
Recomendadonpx skills add expo/skills -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/expo/skillsgit clone https://github.com/expo/skills.git ~/.claude/skills/expo-native-uiCopia y pega este comando en Claude Code para instalar esta habilidad
Documentación
Expo Native UI Guidelines
For routes, links, stacks, tabs, modals, sheets, and headers, use the expo-router skill.
References
Consult these resources as needed:
references/
animations.md Reanimated: entering, exiting, layout, scroll-driven, gestures
controls.md Native iOS: Switch, Slider, SegmentedControl, DateTimePicker, Picker
gradients.md CSS gradients via experimental_backgroundImage (New Arch only)
icons.md SF Symbols via expo-image (sf: source), names, animations, weights
media.md Camera, audio, video, and file saving
storage.md SQLite, AsyncStorage, SecureStore
visual-effects.md Blur (expo-blur) and liquid glass (expo-glass-effect)
webgpu-three.md 3D graphics, games, GPU visualizations with WebGPU and Three.js
Running the App
CRITICAL: Always try Expo Go first before creating custom builds.
Most Expo apps work in Expo Go without any custom native code. Before running npx expo run:ios or npx expo run:android:
- Start with Expo Go: Run
npx expo startand scan the QR code with Expo Go - Check if features work: Test your app thoroughly in Expo Go
- Only create custom builds when required - see below
When Custom Builds Are Required
You need npx expo run:ios/android or eas build ONLY when using:
- Local Expo modules (custom native code in
modules/) - Apple targets (widgets, app clips, extensions via
@bacons/apple-targets) - Third-party native modules not included in Expo Go
- Custom native configuration that can't be expressed in
app.json
When Expo Go Works
Expo Go supports a huge range of features out of the box:
- All
expo-*packages (camera, location, notifications, etc.) - Expo Router navigation
- Most UI libraries (reanimated, gesture handler, etc.)
- Push notifications, deep links, and more
If you're unsure, try Expo Go first. Creating custom builds adds complexity, slower iteration, and requires Xcode/Android Studio setup.
Code Style
- Be cautious of unterminated strings. Ensure nested backticks are escaped; never forget to escape quotes correctly.
- Always use import statements at the top of the file.
- Always use kebab-case for file names, e.g.
comment-card.tsx - Never use special characters in file names
- Configure tsconfig.json with path aliases, and prefer aliases over relative imports for refactors.
Library Preferences
- Never use modules removed from React Native such as Picker, WebView, SafeAreaView, or AsyncStorage
- Never use legacy expo-permissions
expo-audionotexpo-avexpo-videonotexpo-avexpo-imagewithsource="sf:name"for SF Symbols, notexpo-symbolsor@expo/vector-iconsreact-native-safe-area-contextnot react-native SafeAreaViewprocess.env.EXPO_OSnotPlatform.OSReact.usenotReact.useContextexpo-imageImage component instead of intrinsic elementimgexpo-glass-effectfor liquid glass backdropsColorfromexpo-routerfor native semantic colors, not rawPlatformColor(type-safe, auto-adapts to light/dark)- In SDK 56+, never import from
@react-navigation/*directly — useexpo-router/react-navigationinstead (covers@react-navigation/native,/core,/elements,/routers)
Responsiveness
- Always wrap root component in a scroll view for responsiveness
- Use
<ScrollView contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior="automatic" />instead of<SafeAreaView>for smarter safe area insets contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior="automatic"should be applied to FlatList and SectionList as well- Use flexbox instead of Dimensions API
- ALWAYS prefer
useWindowDimensionsoverDimensions.get()to measure screen size
Behavior
- Use expo-haptics conditionally on iOS to make more delightful experiences
- Use views with built-in haptics like
<Switch />from React Native and@react-native-community/datetimepicker - When a route belongs to a Stack, its first child should almost always be a ScrollView with
contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior="automatic"set - When adding a
ScrollViewto the page it should almost always be the first component inside the route component - Use the
<Text selectable />prop on text containing data that could be copied - Consider formatting large numbers like 1.4M or 38k
- Never use intrinsic elements like 'img' or 'div' unless in a webview or Expo DOM component
Styling
Follow Apple Human Interface Guidelines.
General Styling Rules
- Prefer flex gap over margin and padding styles
- Prefer padding over margin where possible
- Always account for safe area, either with stack headers, tabs, or ScrollView/FlatList
contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior="automatic" - Ensure both top and bottom safe area insets are accounted for
- Inline styles not StyleSheet.create unless reusing styles is faster
- Add entering and exiting animations for state changes
- Use
{ borderCurve: 'continuous' }for rounded corners unless creating a capsule shape - ALWAYS use a navigation stack title instead of a custom text element on the page
- When padding a ScrollView, use
contentContainerStylepadding and gap instead of padding on the ScrollView itself (reduces clipping) - CSS and Tailwind are not supported - use inline styles
Colors
Use the Color API from expo-router for native semantic colors. It is a type-safe wrapper over PlatformColor that exposes iOS UIKit colors through Color.ios.* and Android Material 3 colors through Color.android.material.* (static) or Color.android.dynamic.* (adapts to the user's wallpaper on Android 12+). These resolve on-device and automatically adapt to light/dark mode and accessibility settings, so you no longer maintain separate light/dark hex tables or a colors.web.ts file.
Color is platform-specific, so wrap each value in Platform.select with a default hex fallback for web. Centralize the palette in theme/colors.ts and import colors everywhere:
// theme/colors.ts
import { Platform } from "react-native";
import { Color } from "expo-router";
export const colors = {
label: Platform.select({
ios: Color.ios.label,
android: Color.android.dynamic.onSurface,
default: "#000000",
})!,
secondaryLabel: Platform.select({
ios: Color.ios.secondaryLabel,
android: Color.android.dynamic.onSurfaceVariant,
default: "#3c3c43",
})!,
separator: Platform.select({
ios: Color.ios.separator,
android: Color.android.dynamic.outlineVariant,
default: "#c6c6c8",
})!,
systemBackground: Platform.select({
ios: Color.ios.systemBackground,
android: Color.android.dynamic.surface,
default: "#ffffff",
})!,
systemBlue: Platform.select({
ios: Color.ios.systemBlue,
android: Color.android.dynamic.primary,
default: "#007aff",
})!,
};
import { colors } from "@/theme/colors";
<View style={{ backgroundColor: colors.systemBackground }}>
<Text style={{ color: colors.label }}>Title</Text>
</View>;
- iOS re-resolves these colors automatically when the system theme changes. On Android, call
useColorScheme()inside any component that renders them so it re-renders when the theme flips (required when React Compiler memoizes the component). - Don't pass
Color/PlatformColorvalues into Reanimated styles — use static colors there (seereferences/animations.md). Platform.select({...})!returnsstring | OpaqueColorValue. Most React Native style props acceptColorValue(string | OpaqueColorValue) so this works fine. But some third-party props only acceptstring(e.g.tintColoronexpo-image). Cast when needed:colors.label as string.
Text Styling
- Add the
selectableprop to every<Text/>element displaying important data or error messages - Counters should use
{ fontVariant: 'tabular-nums' }for alignment
Shadows
Use CSS boxShadow style prop. NEVER use legacy React Native shadow or elevation styles.
<View style={{ boxShadow: "0 1px 2px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.05)" }} />
'inset' shadows are supported.
Repositorio GitHub
Frequently asked questions
What is the expo-native-ui skill?
expo-native-ui is a Claude Skill by expo. Skills package instructions and resources that Claude loads on demand, so Claude can perform expo-native-ui-related tasks without extra prompting.
How do I install expo-native-ui?
Use the install commands on this page: add expo-native-ui to Claude Code as a plugin, or clone its repository into your skills directory, then restart Claude so it picks up the skill.
What category does expo-native-ui belong to?
expo-native-ui is in the Meta category, tagged design.
Is expo-native-ui free to use?
Yes. expo-native-ui is listed on AIMCP and free to install. It runs inside Claude, so no separate service account is required to use the skill itself.
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