Create Cli OpenClaw Skill - ClawHub
Do you want your AI agent to automate Create Cli workflows? This free skill from ClawHub helps with cli utilities tasks without building custom tools from scratch.
What this skill does
Design command-line interface parameters and UX: arguments, flags, subcommands, help text, output formats, error messages, exit codes, prompts, config/env precedence, and safe/dry-run behavior. Use when you’re designing a CLI spec (before implementation) or refactoring an existing CLI’s surface area for consistency, composability, and discoverability.
Install
npx clawhub@latest install create-cliFull SKILL.md
Open original| name | description |
|---|---|
| create-cli | Design command-line interface parameters and UX: arguments, flags, subcommands, help text, output formats, error messages, exit codes, prompts, config/env precedence, and safe/dry-run behavior. Use when you’re designing a CLI spec (before implementation) or refactoring an existing CLI’s surface area for consistency, composability, and discoverability. |
Create CLI
Design CLI surface area (syntax + behavior), human-first, script-friendly.
Do This First
- Read
agent-scripts/skills/create-cli/references/cli-guidelines.mdand apply it as the default rubric. - Upstream/full guidelines: https://clig.dev/ (propose changes: https://github.com/cli-guidelines/cli-guidelines)
- Ask only the minimum clarifying questions needed to lock the interface.
Clarify (fast)
Ask, then proceed with best-guess defaults if user is unsure:
- Command name + one-sentence purpose.
- Primary user: humans, scripts, or both.
- Input sources: args vs stdin; files vs URLs; secrets (never via flags).
- Output contract: human text,
--json,--plain, exit codes. - Interactivity: prompts allowed? need
--no-input? confirmations for destructive ops? - Config model: flags/env/config-file; precedence; XDG vs repo-local.
- Platform/runtime constraints: macOS/Linux/Windows; single binary vs runtime.
Deliverables (what to output)
When designing a CLI, produce a compact spec the user can implement:
- Command tree + USAGE synopsis.
- Args/flags table (types, defaults, required/optional, examples).
- Subcommand semantics (what each does; idempotence; state changes).
- Output rules: stdout vs stderr; TTY detection;
--json/--plain;--quiet/--verbose. - Error + exit code map (top failure modes).
- Safety rules:
--dry-run, confirmations,--force,--no-input. - Config/env rules + precedence (flags > env > project config > user config > system).
- Shell completion story (if relevant): install/discoverability; generation command or bundled scripts.
- 5–10 example invocations (common flows; include piped/stdin examples).
Default Conventions (unless user says otherwise)
-h/--helpalways shows help and ignores other args.--versionprints version to stdout.- Primary data to stdout; diagnostics/errors to stderr.
- Add
--jsonfor machine output; consider--plainfor stable line-based text. - Prompts only when stdin is a TTY;
--no-inputdisables prompts. - Destructive operations: interactive confirmation + non-interactive requires
--forceor explicit--confirm=.... - Respect
NO_COLOR,TERM=dumb; provide--no-color. - Handle Ctrl-C: exit fast; bounded cleanup; be crash-only when possible.
Templates (copy into your answer)
CLI spec skeleton
Fill these sections, drop anything irrelevant:
- Name:
mycmd - One-liner:
... - USAGE:
mycmd [global flags] <subcommand> [args]
- Subcommands:
mycmd init ...mycmd run ...
- Global flags:
-h, --help--version-q, --quiet/-v, --verbose(define exactly)--json/--plain(if applicable)
- I/O contract:
- stdout:
- stderr:
- Exit codes:
0success1generic failure2invalid usage (parse/validation)- (add command-specific codes only when actually useful)
- Env/config:
- env vars:
- config file path + precedence:
- Examples:
- …
Notes
- Prefer recommending a parsing library (language-specific) only when asked; otherwise keep this skill language-agnostic.
- If the request is “design parameters”, do not drift into implementation.