Unnamed Skill

Ultracite Rules - AI-Ready Formatter and Linter Applies to files matching: **/*.{ts,tsx,js,jsx,json,jsonc,html,vue,svelte,astro,css,yaml,yml,graphql,gql,md,mdx,grit}.

$ Installer

git clone https://github.com/FranciscoMoretti/sparka /tmp/sparka && cp -r /tmp/sparka/.skillz/ultracite ~/.claude/skills/sparka

// tip: Run this command in your terminal to install the skill


name: ultracite description: Ultracite Rules - AI-Ready Formatter and Linter Applies to files matching: **/*.{ts,tsx,js,jsx,json,jsonc,html,vue,svelte,astro,css,yaml,yml,graphql,gql,md,mdx,grit}.

Ultracite Code Standards

This project uses Ultracite, a zero-config Biome preset that enforces strict code quality standards through automated formatting and linting.

Quick Reference

  • Format code: npx ultracite fix
  • Check for issues: npx ultracite check
  • Diagnose setup: npx ultracite doctor

Biome (the underlying engine) provides extremely fast Rust-based linting and formatting. Most issues are automatically fixable.


Core Principles

Write code that is accessible, performant, type-safe, and maintainable. Focus on clarity and explicit intent over brevity.

Type Safety & Explicitness

  • Use explicit types for function parameters and return values when they enhance clarity
  • Prefer unknown over any when the type is genuinely unknown
  • Use const assertions (as const) for immutable values and literal types
  • Leverage TypeScript's type narrowing instead of type assertions
  • Use meaningful variable names instead of magic numbers - extract constants with descriptive names

Modern JavaScript/TypeScript

  • Use arrow functions for callbacks and short functions
  • Prefer for...of loops over .forEach() and indexed for loops
  • Use optional chaining (?.) and nullish coalescing (??) for safer property access
  • Prefer template literals over string concatenation
  • Use destructuring for object and array assignments
  • Use const by default, let only when reassignment is needed, never var

Async & Promises

  • Always await promises in async functions - don't forget to use the return value
  • Use async/await syntax instead of promise chains for better readability
  • Handle errors appropriately in async code with try-catch blocks
  • Don't use async functions as Promise executors

React & JSX

  • Use function components over class components
  • Call hooks at the top level only, never conditionally
  • Specify all dependencies in hook dependency arrays correctly
  • Use the key prop for elements in iterables (prefer unique IDs over array indices)
  • Nest children between opening and closing tags instead of passing as props
  • Don't define components inside other components
  • Use semantic HTML and ARIA attributes for accessibility:
    • Provide meaningful alt text for images
    • Use proper heading hierarchy
    • Add labels for form inputs
    • Include keyboard event handlers alongside mouse events
    • Use semantic elements (<button>, <nav>, etc.) instead of divs with roles

Error Handling & Debugging

  • Remove console.log, debugger, and alert statements from production code
  • Throw Error objects with descriptive messages, not strings or other values
  • Use try-catch blocks meaningfully - don't catch errors just to rethrow them
  • Prefer early returns over nested conditionals for error cases

Code Organization

  • Keep functions focused and under reasonable cognitive complexity limits
  • Extract complex conditions into well-named boolean variables
  • Use early returns to reduce nesting
  • Prefer simple conditionals over nested ternary operators
  • Group related code together and separate concerns

Security

  • Add rel="noopener" when using target="_blank" on links
  • Avoid dangerouslySetInnerHTML unless absolutely necessary
  • Don't use eval() or assign directly to document.cookie
  • Validate and sanitize user input

Performance

  • Avoid spread syntax in accumulators within loops
  • Use top-level regex literals instead of creating them in loops
  • Prefer specific imports over namespace imports
  • Avoid barrel files (index files that re-export everything)
  • Use proper image components (e.g., Next.js <Image>) over <img> tags

Framework-Specific Guidance

Next.js:

  • Use Next.js <Image> component for images
  • Use next/head or App Router metadata API for head elements
  • Use Server Components for async data fetching instead of async Client Components

React 19+:

  • Use ref as a prop instead of React.forwardRef

Solid/Svelte/Vue/Qwik:

  • Use class and for attributes (not className or htmlFor)

Testing

  • Write assertions inside it() or test() blocks
  • Avoid done callbacks in async tests - use async/await instead
  • Don't use .only or .skip in committed code
  • Keep test suites reasonably flat - avoid excessive describe nesting

When Biome Can't Help

Biome's linter will catch most issues automatically. Focus your attention on:

  1. Business logic correctness - Biome can't validate your algorithms
  2. Meaningful naming - Use descriptive names for functions, variables, and types
  3. Architecture decisions - Component structure, data flow, and API design
  4. Edge cases - Handle boundary conditions and error states
  5. User experience - Accessibility, performance, and usability considerations
  6. Documentation - Add comments for complex logic, but prefer self-documenting code

Most formatting and common issues are automatically fixed by Biome. Run npx ultracite fix before committing to ensure compliance.