Swiftui View Refactor
/install swiftui-view-refactor
SwiftUI View Refactor
Attribution: copied from @Dimillian’s Dimillian/Skills (2025-12-31).
Overview
Apply a consistent structure and dependency pattern to SwiftUI views, with a focus on ordering, Model-View (MV) patterns, careful view model handling, and correct Observation usage.
Core Guidelines
1) View ordering (top → bottom)
- Environment
private/publiclet@State/ other stored properties- computed
var(non-view) initbody- computed view builders / other view helpers
- helper / async functions
2) Prefer MV (Model-View) patterns
- Default to MV: Views are lightweight state expressions; models/services own business logic.
- Favor
@State,@Environment,@Query, andtask/onChangefor orchestration. - Inject services and shared models via
@Environment; keep views small and composable. - Split large views into subviews rather than introducing a view model.
3) Split large bodies and view properties
- If
bodygrows beyond a screen or has multiple logical sections, split it into smaller subviews. - Extract large computed view properties (
var header: some View { ... }) into dedicatedViewtypes when they carry state or complex branching. - It's fine to keep related subviews as computed view properties in the same file; extract to a standalone
Viewstruct only when it structurally makes sense or when reuse is intended. - Prefer passing small inputs (data, bindings, callbacks) over reusing the entire parent view state.
Example (extracting a section):
var body: some View {
VStack(alignment: .leading, spacing: 16) {
HeaderSection(title: title, isPinned: isPinned)
DetailsSection(details: details)
ActionsSection(onSave: onSave, onCancel: onCancel)
}
}
Example (long body → shorter body + computed views in the same file):
var body: some View {
List {
header
filters
results
footer
}
}
private var header: some View {
VStack(alignment: .leading, spacing: 6) {
Text(title).font(.title2)
Text(subtitle).font(.subheadline)
}
}
private var filters: some View {
ScrollView(.horizontal, showsIndicators: false) {
HStack {
ForEach(filterOptions, id: \.self) { option in
FilterChip(option: option, isSelected: option == selectedFilter)
.onTapGesture { selectedFilter = option }
}
}
}
}
Example (extracting a complex computed view):
private var header: some View {
HeaderSection(title: title, subtitle: subtitle, status: status)
}
private struct HeaderSection: View {
let title: String
let subtitle: String?
let status: Status
var body: some View {
VStack(alignment: .leading, spacing: 4) {
Text(title).font(.headline)
if let subtitle { Text(subtitle).font(.subheadline) }
StatusBadge(status: status)
}
}
}
4) View model handling (only if already present)
- Do not introduce a view model unless the request or existing code clearly calls for one.
- If a view model exists, make it non-optional when possible.
- Pass dependencies to the view via
init, then pass them into the view model in the view'sinit. - Avoid
bootstrapIfNeededpatterns.
Example (Observation-based):
@State private var viewModel: SomeViewModel
init(dependency: Dependency) {
_viewModel = State(initialValue: SomeViewModel(dependency: dependency))
}
5) Observation usage
- For
@Observablereference types, store them as@Statein the root view. - Pass observables down explicitly as needed; avoid optional state unless required.
Workflow
- Reorder the view to match the ordering rules.
- Favor MV: move lightweight orchestration into the view using
@State,@Environment,@Query,task, andonChange. - If a view model exists, replace optional view models with a non-optional
@Stateview model initialized ininitby passing dependencies from the view. - Confirm Observation usage:
@Statefor root@Observableview models, no redundant wrappers. - Keep behavior intact: do not change layout or business logic unless requested.
Notes
- Prefer small, explicit helpers over large conditional blocks.
- Keep computed view builders below
bodyand non-view computed vars aboveinit. - For MV-first guidance and rationale, see
references/mv-patterns.md.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install swiftui-view-refactor - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/swiftui-view-refactor - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Swiftui View Refactor?
Refactor and review SwiftUI view files for consistent structure, dependency injection, and Observation usage. Use when asked to clean up a SwiftUI view’s layout/ordering, handle view models safely (non-optional when possible), or standardize how dependencies and @Observable state are initialized and passed. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 2794 downloads so far.
How do I install Swiftui View Refactor?
Run "/install swiftui-view-refactor" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Swiftui View Refactor free?
Yes, Swiftui View Refactor is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Swiftui View Refactor support?
Swiftui View Refactor is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Swiftui View Refactor?
It is built and maintained by Peter Steinberger (@steipete); the current version is v1.0.0.