expo-project-structure
Acerca de
Esta habilidad proporciona una estructura de carpetas estandarizada para nuevas aplicaciones Expo que utilizan Expo Router, ayudando a los desarrolladores a crear la base de proyectos y decidir dónde deben ubicarse los archivos. Incluye directorios organizados para rutas, componentes, utilidades y recursos, siguiendo convenciones modernas. Úsela solo para proyectos nuevos—nunca reestructure aplicaciones existentes para que coincidan con este esquema.
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-project-structureCopia y pega este comando en Claude Code para instalar esta habilidad
Documentación
Expo Project Structure
A starting skeleton for a new Expo app — one with no committed folder structure yet.
Apply only to new projects. If the app already has a layout, follow its existing conventions and leave files where they are — a default to start from, never a standard to enforce or migrate toward. When unsure whether a project is new, ask before moving anything.
The whole layout, assembled from the rules below:
├── assets/
├── scripts/
├── src/
│ ├── app/ # Expo Router routes ONLY — every file is a route
│ │ ├── api/ # server API routes, grouped here
│ │ │ ├── user+api.ts
│ │ │ └── settings+api.ts
│ │ ├── _layout.tsx
│ │ ├── _layout.web.tsx # platform-specific layout
│ │ ├── index.tsx
│ │ └── settings.tsx
│ ├── components/ # reusable UI: button, card, table…
│ │ ├── table/ # complex component → folder + index.tsx
│ │ │ ├── cell.tsx
│ │ │ └── index.tsx
│ │ ├── bar-chart.tsx
│ │ ├── bar-chart.web.tsx # platform-specific variant
│ │ └── button.tsx
│ ├── screens/ # screen bodies that route files render
│ │ ├── home/
│ │ │ ├── card.tsx # used only by Home — not shared
│ │ │ └── index.tsx # rendered by src/app/index.tsx
│ │ └── settings.tsx
│ ├── server/ # server-only helpers used by app/api
│ │ ├── auth.ts
│ │ └── db.ts
│ ├── utils/ # standalone helpers + colocated tests
│ │ ├── format-date.ts
│ │ └── format-date.test.ts
│ ├── hooks/ # reusable hooks: use-theme.ts…
│ ├── constants.ts
│ └── theme.ts
├── app.json
├── eas.json
└── package.json
src/ and src/app
Keep app code under src/ to separate it from config files. Expo Router supports both app/ and src/app/ out of the box — to switch, move the folder and restart the bundler. The default template aliases @/* to ./src/* in tsconfig.json.
src/app is routes-only: every file there becomes a route, so nothing else belongs in it. Everything below lives in sibling folders.
components/ — reusable UI
Generic, reused UI (button, card, table) with one named export each. Name files in kebab-case (bar-chart.tsx), matching the default create-expo-app template. When a component grows, give it its own folder with the root in index.tsx and colocate its private sub-components beside it — the import path (@/components/table) stays unchanged.
screens/ — screen bodies
Because app/ files must be routes, complex screen UI that isn't reused has no home there. Once a screen grows big enough to need breaking out to separate components, put it in screens/ and let each route just render its screen:
import { Home } from "@/screens/home";
export default function HomeScreen() {
// route-specific concerns only — e.g. read url params here
return <Home />;
}
Colocate a screen's private components inside its folder (screens/home/components/). A bonus: the same screen can render under multiple routes.
server/ + app/api/ — separate server code
Appending +api to a file in app/ makes it a server API route. Server code is different from frontend code — it runs in a Node-like server environment (deployed with EAS Hosting or on third-party services) and can read secret env vars (process.env.X, not just EXPO_PUBLIC_*). Keep it apart:
- Group all routes under
app/api/→/api/user,/api/settings. This colocates them and avoids collisions (e.g. a/userscreen and a/userroute). - Put shared server-only helpers in
src/server/. - Consider ESLint rules that fence
+apifiles andserver/off from frontend-only checks.
Platform-specific code
Small differences: use Platform.select / Platform.OS. For larger ones, split into platform files instead of inline if/else — bar-chart.tsx + bar-chart.web.tsx, imported extension-free (@/components/bar-chart); Metro picks the right file per target.
- Props must be identical across variants.
- A default file (no platform extension) is always required — make it a no-op if the component is single-platform.
- Supported extensions:
.ios,.android,.native,.web.
Colocate styles and tests
- Styles: keep the
StyleSheet.create({ ... })object at the bottom of the component file rather than in a separate.stylesfile. - Tests: put
format-date.test.tsnext toformat-date.ts(preferred over a separate__tests__/folder) so tested files are obvious at a glance.
AI and config files
Agent instructions live at the repo root — AGENTS.md / CLAUDE.md, with project skills under .claude/. Other config and assets stay outside src/: app.json / app.config.ts, eas.json, package.json, assets/, and scripts/.
Based on Expo app folder structure best practices by Kadi Kraman. For src/ precedence and alias mechanics, see the Expo docs.
Repositorio GitHub
Frequently asked questions
What is the expo-project-structure skill?
expo-project-structure is a Claude Skill by expo. Skills package instructions and resources that Claude loads on demand, so Claude can perform expo-project-structure-related tasks without extra prompting.
How do I install expo-project-structure?
Use the install commands on this page: add expo-project-structure 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-project-structure belong to?
expo-project-structure is in the Other category, tagged api.
Is expo-project-structure free to use?
Yes. expo-project-structure is listed on AIMCP and free to install. It runs inside Claude, so no separate service account is required to use the skill itself.
Habilidades relacionadas
LlamaGuard es el modelo de Meta de 7-8B parámetros para moderar las entradas y salidas de LLM en seis categorías de seguridad como violencia y discurso de odio. Ofrece una precisión del 94-95% y puede implementarse usando vLLM, Hugging Face o Amazon SageMaker. Utiliza esta skill para integrar fácilmente filtrado de contenido y barreras de seguridad en tus aplicaciones de IA.
Esta Skill de Claude ayuda a los desarrolladores a optimizar los costes en la nube mediante el ajuste de tamaño de recursos, estrategias de etiquetado y análisis de gastos. Proporciona un marco para reducir los gastos en la nube e implementar una gobernanza de costes en AWS, Azure y GCP. Úsala cuando necesites analizar los costes de infraestructura, ajustar el tamaño de los recursos o cumplir con restricciones presupuestarias.
Esta habilidad de Claude analiza los mercados de apuestas deportivas, incluyendo spreads, over/unders y apuestas de propuestas, mediante el examen de tendencias históricas y estadísticas situacionales para identificar apuestas de valor. Proporciona una salida en markdown estructurado con recomendaciones accionables con fines educativos. Los desarrolladores deben utilizar esto para herramientas de análisis de apuestas deportivas, teniendo en cuenta que está diseñado únicamente para entretenimiento/educación.
Esta habilidad cuantiza LLMs a precisión de 8 o 4 bits utilizando bitsandbytes, logrando una reducción de memoria del 50-75% con pérdida mínima de precisión. Es ideal para ejecutar modelos más grandes en memoria GPU limitada o para acelerar la inferencia, admitiendo formatos como INT8, NF4 y FP4. La habilidad se integra con HuggingFace Transformers y permite entrenamiento QLoRA y optimizadores de 8 bits.
