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{
"name": "ts-quality",
"description": "TypeScript quality enforcement with instant file-scoped checks and architectural review. Auto-activated skill runs typecheck and lint after each file write. Includes /ts-review command for comprehensive code analysis.",
"version": "1.0.0",
"author": {
"name": "Clifton Cunningham",
"email": "clifton.cunningham@gmail.com"
},
"skills": [
"./skills/ts-quality"
],
"commands": [
"./commands/"
]
}

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# ts-quality
TypeScript quality enforcement with instant file-scoped checks and architectural review. Auto-activated skill runs typecheck and lint after each file write. Includes /ts-review command for comprehensive code analysis.

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---
name: ts-review
description: Perform architectural review of uncommitted TypeScript code with quality checks and pragmatic improvement suggestions
---
# TypeScript Architectural Review
This command performs a comprehensive architectural review of uncommitted TypeScript code, combining quality checks with architectural analysis to provide concrete, pragmatic suggestions for improvement.
## What This Command Does
When invoked, this command:
1. **Identifies Uncommitted Changes** - Uses `git diff` to find modified/new .ts/.tsx files
2. **Runs Quality Checks** - Same criteria as typescript-quality skill:
- Type checking (`pnpm typecheck`)
- Linting (`pnpm lint`)
- Building (`pnpm build`)
3. **Performs Architectural Review** - Analyzes code structure, design patterns, and provides concrete improvements
4. **Delivers Pragmatic Suggestions** - Actionable recommendations, not theoretical perfection
## Usage
```bash
/ts-review
```
Run this command before committing TypeScript changes to ensure both quality and good architectural design.
## Instructions
When this command is invoked, follow these steps:
### 1. Identify Changed Files and Check Size
**Step 1: Find changed TypeScript files**
```bash
# Get list of modified TypeScript files (both staged and unstaged)
{ git diff --name-only; git diff --cached --name-only; } | sort -u | grep -E '\.(ts|tsx)$'
# Also get untracked TypeScript files
git ls-files --others --exclude-standard | grep -E '\.(ts|tsx)$'
```
**If no TypeScript files found:**
- Report: "No uncommitted TypeScript files found. Nothing to review."
- Exit
**Step 2: Check total diff size (for planning purposes)**
```bash
# Count total lines changed (gives us a sense of changeset size)
{ git diff; git diff --cached; } | wc -l
```
**If diff is larger than 1000 lines:**
- Report: "Large changeset detected (X lines across Y TypeScript files). This review may take a while."
- List all changed TypeScript files
- **Use the AskUserQuestion tool** to let the user choose:
- Option 1: "Review all files now"
- Option 2: "Let me select specific files to review"
- Option 3: "Review files one at a time"
- Based on user's choice, proceed accordingly
**If diff is 1000 lines or less:**
- Proceed with full review of all changed TypeScript files
### 2. Run Quality Checks (ZERO TOLERANCE)
Execute quality checks sequentially, stopping at first failure:
```bash
pnpm typecheck && pnpm lint && pnpm build
```
**If any check fails:**
- Report the specific errors with file paths and line numbers
- DO NOT proceed to architectural review
- Exit with clear instructions to fix errors first
**If all checks pass:**
- Report: "✓ All quality checks passed"
- Proceed to architectural review
### 3. Read Changed Files
**Use the Read tool to analyze all changed TypeScript files** from step 1.
For each file in the list:
- Use the Read tool to get the current file contents
- Analyze the code structure, patterns, and potential issues
- Focus your review on understanding what changed and why
**Build understanding:**
- Understand what functionality is being added/modified in each file
- Identify architectural patterns in the code
- Look for potential issues in the implementation
- Consider how changes fit into the broader codebase structure
### 4. Perform Architectural Review
Analyze the uncommitted code for:
#### A. Design Patterns & Principles
**SOLID Principles:**
- **Single Responsibility**: Does each class/function have one clear purpose?
- **Open/Closed**: Is code open for extension, closed for modification?
- **Liskov Substitution**: Can subclasses replace parent classes without breaking?
- **Interface Segregation**: Are interfaces focused and not bloated?
- **Dependency Inversion**: Does code depend on abstractions, not concretions?
**Common Issues to Flag:**
- God classes/functions doing too much
- Tight coupling between modules
- Circular dependencies
- Missing abstractions
- Violation of separation of concerns
#### B. Code Structure & Organization
**File Organization:**
- Are related functions/classes grouped logically?
- Is the file size reasonable (< 500 lines generally)?
- Should code be split into multiple files?
- Are imports organized and minimal?
**Function/Method Design:**
- Are functions focused on a single task?
- Is complexity reasonable (cyclomatic complexity < 10)?
- Are parameter counts reasonable (< 5 parameters)?
- Are functions too long (> 50 lines warrants review)?
**Class Design:**
- Are classes cohesive (methods work with shared state)?
- Is inheritance used appropriately (favor composition)?
- Are class responsibilities clear?
#### C. Type Safety & TypeScript Usage
**Type Quality:**
- Are types explicit where clarity is needed?
- Is `any` being abused? (should use `unknown` or proper types)
- Are union types used effectively?
- Are generics used where appropriate?
- Are type guards used for runtime safety?
**Type Organization:**
- Should types be extracted to separate files?
- Are complex types well-documented?
- Are types reusable across the codebase?
#### D. Error Handling & Resilience
**Error Handling:**
- Are errors handled appropriately?
- Are error messages informative?
- Are errors typed (custom error classes)?
- Is error propagation clear?
**Edge Cases:**
- Are null/undefined cases handled?
- Are boundary conditions considered?
- Is input validation present?
#### E. Testability & Maintainability
**Testability:**
- Can the code be easily unit tested?
- Are dependencies injectable?
- Is business logic separated from infrastructure?
- Are side effects isolated?
**Maintainability:**
- Is code self-documenting with clear names?
- Are complex sections commented?
- Is there duplication that should be extracted?
- Can code be understood by other developers?
#### F. Performance & Efficiency
**Common Performance Issues:**
- Unnecessary re-renders (React components)
- N+1 query problems
- Missing memoization for expensive operations
- Inefficient algorithms (O(n²) when O(n) exists)
- Large object copying
**Note**: Only flag performance issues that are clearly problematic, not micro-optimizations.
### 5. Generate Pragmatic Suggestions
For each issue found, provide:
1. **Location**: File path and line numbers (e.g., `src/auth/login.ts:45-67`)
2. **Issue**: Clear description of the problem
3. **Impact**: Why this matters (coupling, testing, performance, etc.)
4. **Suggestion**: Concrete, actionable fix (not theoretical)
5. **Example**: Show before/after code when helpful
**Format each suggestion as:**
```markdown
### Issue: [Brief Title]
**Location:** `file/path.ts:line-range`
**Problem:**
[Clear description of what's wrong]
**Impact:**
[Why this matters - coupling, maintainability, bugs, performance]
**Suggestion:**
[Concrete steps to improve]
**Example:**
[Optional: before/after code snippet]
```
### 6. Prioritize Suggestions
Organize suggestions by priority:
**🔴 Critical (Fix Now):**
- Severe SOLID violations
- Major coupling issues
- Security concerns
- Clear bug risks
**🟡 Important (Fix Soon):**
- Moderate design issues
- Testability problems
- Maintainability concerns
- Performance issues
**🟢 Nice to Have (Consider):**
- Minor improvements
- Consistency issues
- Optimization opportunities
### 7. Provide Summary
End with a summary:
```markdown
## Summary
**Files Reviewed:** [count]
**Quality Checks:** ✓ All passed
**Issues Found:**
- 🔴 Critical: [count]
- 🟡 Important: [count]
- 🟢 Nice to Have: [count]
**Overall Assessment:**
[1-2 sentence summary of code quality]
**Top Priority:**
[Most important thing to address]
```
## Best Practices for Reviews
### Be Pragmatic, Not Pedantic
- Focus on issues that genuinely impact quality
- Don't flag style issues already caught by linting
- Avoid theoretical concerns without real impact
- Prioritize maintainability and clarity
### Be Concrete, Not Abstract
- ❌ "This violates separation of concerns"
- ✅ "Extract database logic from this component into a repository class - see example below"
### Be Helpful, Not Critical
- Frame suggestions as improvements, not criticisms
- Acknowledge good patterns when you see them
- Explain the "why" behind suggestions
### Be Realistic About Refactoring
- Don't suggest massive refactors for small changes
- Consider the context and scope of the commit
- Focus on incremental improvements
- Note when bigger refactors might be valuable "in the future"
## Edge Cases
### No Issues Found
If the code is genuinely good:
```markdown
## Review Complete
**Files Reviewed:** [count]
**Quality Checks:** ✓ All passed
**Architectural Issues:** None found
**Assessment:**
The uncommitted TypeScript code follows good architectural practices. The code is:
- Well-structured and organized
- Properly typed with good TypeScript usage
- Testable and maintainable
- Following SOLID principles appropriately
No changes recommended. Code is ready to commit.
```
### Only Quality Check Failures
If quality checks fail before architectural review:
```markdown
## Quality Checks Failed
**Files Reviewed:** [count]
**Quality Check Status:** ✗ Failed
The following quality checks must pass before architectural review:
[Error output from failed checks]
Please fix these errors and run `/ts-review` again.
```
### Mixed Results
Some files good, some with issues - provide granular feedback per file.
## Example Output
```markdown
# TypeScript Architectural Review
**Date:** 2025-01-15
**Uncommitted Files:** 3 TypeScript files
## Quality Checks
✓ Type checking passed
✓ Linting passed
✓ Build passed
✓ Tests passed (12/12)
---
## Architectural Review
### 🔴 Critical: God Class with Multiple Responsibilities
**Location:** `src/services/UserService.ts:15-250`
**Problem:**
The `UserService` class handles authentication, profile management, email notifications, and database operations. This violates the Single Responsibility Principle.
**Impact:**
- Difficult to test (must mock database, email, auth)
- Changes to email logic risk breaking authentication
- Class has 250 lines and growing
**Suggestion:**
Split into focused services:
1. `AuthService` - handles login/logout/tokens
2. `UserProfileService` - manages user profiles
3. `UserNotificationService` - sends user emails
4. `UserRepository` - database operations
Keep `UserService` as a facade if needed, delegating to specialized services.
**Example:**
```typescript
// Before: One class doing everything
class UserService {
login() { /* auth logic */ }
updateProfile() { /* profile logic */ }
sendEmail() { /* email logic */ }
saveToDb() { /* db logic */ }
}
// After: Focused services
class AuthService {
constructor(private userRepo: UserRepository) {}
login() { /* auth logic */ }
}
class UserProfileService {
constructor(
private userRepo: UserRepository,
private notificationService: UserNotificationService
) {}
updateProfile() { /* profile logic */ }
}
```
---
### 🟡 Important: Missing Abstraction for Third-Party API
**Location:** `src/api/PaymentProcessor.ts:45-89`
**Problem:**
Stripe API calls are made directly throughout the code with hardcoded endpoints and no abstraction layer.
**Impact:**
- Cannot easily switch payment providers
- Difficult to test (must mock Stripe SDK directly)
- Stripe-specific logic scattered across files
**Suggestion:**
Create a `PaymentGateway` interface and `StripePaymentGateway` implementation:
```typescript
interface PaymentGateway {
processPayment(amount: number, token: string): Promise<PaymentResult>
refund(transactionId: string): Promise<RefundResult>
}
class StripePaymentGateway implements PaymentGateway {
// Stripe-specific implementation
}
// Easy to test with a mock
class MockPaymentGateway implements PaymentGateway {
// Test implementation
}
```
---
### 🟢 Nice to Have: Extract Complex Type
**Location:** `src/types/api.ts:120-145`
**Problem:**
Inline type definition for API response is complex and reused in 3 places with slight variations.
**Suggestion:**
Extract to a named type with generic parameter for variations:
```typescript
type ApiResponse<T> = {
data: T
status: 'success' | 'error'
metadata: {
timestamp: number
requestId: string
}
}
```
---
## Summary
**Files Reviewed:** 3
**Quality Checks:** ✓ All passed
**Issues Found:**
- 🔴 Critical: 1
- 🟡 Important: 1
- 🟢 Nice to Have: 1
**Overall Assessment:**
Code quality is good, but the UserService class needs immediate refactoring to improve testability and maintainability.
**Top Priority:**
Split UserService into focused services (AuthService, UserProfileService, etc.)
```
## Requirements
This command requires:
- **Git repository** - Uses git to identify uncommitted files
- **pnpm** - For running quality checks
- **TypeScript** - Configured in the project
- **Linter, build, test** - Same requirements as typescript-quality skill
## Related
- **typescript-quality skill** - Automatically enforces quality checks when modifying TypeScript files
- Use `/ts-review` for deeper architectural analysis before commits

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---
name: ts-quality
description: Enforce TypeScript quality standards immediately after writing or modifying .ts/.tsx files. Run type checking and linting on each changed file for instant feedback. Use after creating/editing TypeScript files, or when quality checks, typecheck, lint, or validate are mentioned.
---
# TypeScript Quality Enforcement
This skill helps maintain TypeScript code quality by running instant checks on each file after it's written or modified.
## What This Skill Does
When activated, this skill ensures TypeScript code meets quality standards by:
1. **Type Checking** - Runs `pnpm exec tsc --noEmit <file>` to ensure zero TypeScript type errors
2. **Linting** - Runs `pnpm lint <file>` to enforce code style consistency
Checks run on the SPECIFIC FILE that was just written/modified, not the entire project.
## When to Use This Skill
Activate this skill:
- **Immediately after writing or modifying any .ts or .tsx file**
- After creating new TypeScript files
- After editing existing TypeScript files
- When user mentions: "quality checks", "typecheck", "lint", "validate code"
- Before creating git commits
- During code review processes
## Quality Standards
**ZERO TOLERANCE POLICY**: No lint errors or type errors are acceptable.
### Required Checks (in sequence):
1. **Type Checking** - File-scoped typecheck
- Must pass with zero errors
- Validates TypeScript type safety for the specific file
2. **Linting** - File-scoped lint
- Must pass with zero errors
- Enforces consistent code formatting and style
## Instructions
When this skill is active, follow these steps:
### 1. Announce Activation
Immediately inform the user that quality checks are running:
```
🔍 Checking {filename}...
```
Replace `{filename}` with the actual file path (e.g., `src/utils/auth.ts`).
### 2. Identify the File to Check
Determine which TypeScript file was just written or modified. This is the file to check.
### 3. Run File-Scoped Quality Checks
Execute checks sequentially on the SPECIFIC FILE ONLY:
```bash
# Type check the specific file
pnpm exec tsc --noEmit path/to/file.ts
# Lint the specific file
pnpm lint path/to/file.ts
```
**Important**:
- Only check the file that was written/modified
- Do NOT run project-wide checks
- Each command must succeed before the next runs
### 4. Report Results
**If all checks pass:**
Report success clearly:
```
✓ {filename}: typecheck and lint passed
```
**If any check fails:**
- Report the specific errors with line numbers
- Format: `✗ {filename}: found N errors`
- Show the actual error messages
- DO NOT proceed to subsequent checks
- DO NOT allow commits with failing checks
- Fix the errors before continuing
## Type Safety Guidelines
### DO:
- Use explicit types for function parameters and return values
- Leverage TypeScript's type inference for simple variable assignments
- Use `unknown` instead of `any` when the type is truly unknown
- Define interfaces for object shapes
- Use type guards for runtime validation of external data
- Document complex types with JSDoc comments
### DO NOT:
- Use `any` without explicit justification in comments
- Ignore TypeScript errors (no `@ts-ignore` without explanation)
- Skip typecheck before committing
- Commit code with lint errors
- Use `@ts-expect-error` to suppress valid errors
- Bypass quality checks "just this once"
## Examples
### Example 1: Creating New TypeScript File
**User**: "Create a new TypeScript component for user authentication"
**Actions**:
1. Create the file with proper types (explicit parameter and return types)
2. Avoid using `any` types
3. After file creation, immediately run quality checks:
- Announce: `🔍 Checking src/components/Auth.tsx...`
- Run: `pnpm exec tsc --noEmit src/components/Auth.tsx`
- Run: `pnpm lint src/components/Auth.tsx`
- Report: `✓ src/components/Auth.tsx: typecheck and lint passed`
4. Only consider the task complete when checks pass
### Example 2: Modifying Existing Code
**User**: "Update the session processing logic to handle new event types"
**Actions**:
1. Make changes to the file maintaining type safety
2. After saving the file, immediately run quality checks:
- Announce: `🔍 Checking packages/session/src/processor.ts...`
- Run: `pnpm exec tsc --noEmit packages/session/src/processor.ts`
- Run: `pnpm lint packages/session/src/processor.ts`
- Report results:
- If passed: `✓ packages/session/src/processor.ts: typecheck and lint passed`
- If failed: `✗ packages/session/src/processor.ts: found 2 errors` (then show errors)
### Example 3: File with Errors
**User**: Writes a file with type errors
**Actions**:
1. Announce: `🔍 Checking src/utils/helper.ts...`
2. Run typecheck: `pnpm exec tsc --noEmit src/utils/helper.ts`
3. Detect errors and report:
```
✗ src/utils/helper.ts: found 3 errors
src/utils/helper.ts:15:5 - error TS2322: Type 'string' is not assignable to type 'number'.
src/utils/helper.ts:22:10 - error TS2339: Property 'foo' does not exist on type 'User'.
src/utils/helper.ts:35:3 - error TS2345: Argument of type 'null' is not assignable to parameter of type 'string'.
```
4. Do NOT proceed to lint
5. Wait for user to fix errors
## Integration with pnpm Workspaces
This skill works with pnpm workspace monorepos by checking individual files in their packages.
File-scoped checks work across packages without needing to change directories.
## Quick Reference Commands
```bash
# File-scoped typecheck (fast, targeted)
pnpm exec tsc --noEmit path/to/file.ts
# File-scoped lint
pnpm lint path/to/file.ts
# Both checks in sequence
pnpm exec tsc --noEmit path/to/file.ts && pnpm lint path/to/file.ts
```
## Error Handling
When errors occur:
1. **Type Errors**: Show the file, line number, and error message
2. **Lint Errors**: Show the file, line number, rule violated, and how to fix
Always provide actionable information to help fix the errors.
## Best Practices
- **Check after every file write** - Instant feedback prevents accumulating errors
- **Fix errors immediately** - Don't accumulate technical debt
- **Type errors first** - Must be resolved before linting
- **Never commit failing code** - No exceptions
- **File-scoped only** - Don't run project-wide checks
- **Pragmatic quality** - Focus on correctness, not perfection
## Requirements
This skill requires projects to have:
- **pnpm** installed
- **TypeScript** installed and configured
- **Linter** (Biome, ESLint, or similar) configured
The skill uses:
- `pnpm exec tsc --noEmit <file>` for type checking
- `pnpm lint <file>` for linting