AgentSkillsCN

component-library-design

当您致力于构建可复用的UI组件体系,使其能够在不同团队与产品间无缝扩展时

SKILL.md
--- frontmatter
name: component-library-design
description: When building reusable UI component systems that scale across teams and products
tags: [ui-ux, design-systems, frontend, scalability, reusability]

Component Library Design

Overview

The practice of creating systematic, reusable UI component libraries that serve as the building blocks for consistent, scalable user interfaces across products and teams. Component libraries codify design principles, ensure visual consistency, accelerate development, and reduce design debt.

Core Principles

  • Atomic Design: Components hierarchically organized (atoms → molecules → organisms)
  • Composability: Combine simple components into complex UIs
  • Design Tokens: Abstract design decisions into reusable variables
  • Accessibility: WCAG compliance built-in by default
  • Documentation: Living examples and usage guidelines

Execution Steps

1. Audit Existing Patterns

Inventory all UI patterns, identify inconsistencies, prioritize most-used components.

2. Define Design System Principles

Establish brand, spacing, motion, and voice & tone guidelines.

3. Build Core Components (80/20)

Start with buttons, inputs, typography, layout, and feedback components.

4. Create Design Tokens

Extract hardcoded values to semantic variables for theming and consistency.

5. Document Component APIs

Define props, variants, composition patterns, accessibility, and examples.

6. Establish Contribution Guidelines

When to create new components, approval process, versioning, deprecation.

7. Measure Adoption

Track coverage, consistency, velocity, and satisfaction metrics.

Scoring (36/50)

  • Practitioner Weight (7/10): Industry standard practice
  • Clarity (8/10): Clear methodology
  • Proven ROI (8/10): Measurable improvements
  • Novelty (4/10): Established practice
  • Applicability (9/10): Universal UI development

Sources

  • Brad Frost: Atomic Design
  • Material Design Guidelines
  • Design Systems Handbook
  • Storybook documentation
  • Nathan Curtis: Design Systems articles