/install dhh-rails-style
\x3Cobjective> Apply 37signals/DHH Rails conventions to Ruby and Rails code. This skill provides comprehensive domain expertise extracted from analyzing production 37signals codebases (Fizzy/Campfire) and DHH's code review patterns. \x3C/objective>
\x3Cessential_principles>
Core Philosophy
"The best code is the code you don't write. The second best is the code that's obviously correct."
Vanilla Rails is plenty:
- Rich domain models over service objects
- CRUD controllers over custom actions
- Concerns for horizontal code sharing
- Records as state instead of boolean columns
- Database-backed everything (no Redis)
- Build solutions before reaching for gems
What they deliberately avoid:
- devise (custom ~150-line auth instead)
- pundit/cancancan (simple role checks in models)
- sidekiq (Solid Queue uses database)
- redis (database for everything)
- view_component (partials work fine)
- GraphQL (REST with Turbo sufficient)
- factory_bot (fixtures are simpler)
- rspec (Minitest ships with Rails)
- Tailwind (native CSS with layers)
Development Philosophy:
- Ship, Validate, Refine - prototype-quality code to production to learn
- Fix root causes, not symptoms
- Write-time operations over read-time computations
- Database constraints over ActiveRecord validations \x3C/essential_principles>
\x3Cintake> What are you working on?
- Controllers - REST mapping, concerns, Turbo responses, API patterns
- Models - Concerns, state records, callbacks, scopes, POROs
- Views & Frontend - Turbo, Stimulus, CSS, partials
- Architecture - Routing, multi-tenancy, authentication, jobs, caching
- Testing - Minitest, fixtures, integration tests
- Gems & Dependencies - What to use vs avoid
- Code Review - Review code against DHH style
- General Guidance - Philosophy and conventions
Specify a number or describe your task. \x3C/intake>
\x3Crouting>
| Response | Reference to Read |
|---|---|
| 1, controller | controllers.md |
| 2, model | models.md |
| 3, view, frontend, turbo, stimulus, css | frontend.md |
| 4, architecture, routing, auth, job, cache | architecture.md |
| 5, test, testing, minitest, fixture | testing.md |
| 6, gem, dependency, library | gems.md |
| 7, review | Read all references, then review code |
| 8, general task | Read relevant references based on context |
After reading relevant references, apply patterns to the user's code. \x3C/routing>
\x3Cquick_reference>
Naming Conventions
Verbs: card.close, card.gild, board.publish (not set_style methods)
Predicates: card.closed?, card.golden? (derived from presence of related record)
Concerns: Adjectives describing capability (Closeable, Publishable, Watchable)
Controllers: Nouns matching resources (Cards::ClosuresController)
Scopes:
chronologically,reverse_chronologically,alphabetically,latestpreloaded(standard eager loading name)indexed_by,sorted_by(parameterized)active,unassigned(business terms, not SQL-ish)
REST Mapping
Instead of custom actions, create new resources:
POST /cards/:id/close → POST /cards/:id/closure
DELETE /cards/:id/close → DELETE /cards/:id/closure
POST /cards/:id/archive → POST /cards/:id/archival
Ruby Syntax Preferences
# Symbol arrays with spaces inside brackets
before_action :set_message, only: %i[ show edit update destroy ]
# Private method indentation
private
def set_message
@message = Message.find(params[:id])
end
# Expression-less case for conditionals
case
when params[:before].present?
messages.page_before(params[:before])
else
messages.last_page
end
# Bang methods for fail-fast
@message = Message.create!(params)
# Ternaries for simple conditionals
@room.direct? ? @room.users : @message.mentionees
Key Patterns
State as Records:
Card.joins(:closure) # closed cards
Card.where.missing(:closure) # open cards
Current Attributes:
belongs_to :creator, default: -> { Current.user }
Authorization on Models:
class User \x3C ApplicationRecord
def can_administer?(message)
message.creator == self || admin?
end
end
\x3C/quick_reference>
\x3Creference_index>
Domain Knowledge
All detailed patterns in references/:
| File | Topics |
|---|---|
| controllers.md | REST mapping, concerns, Turbo responses, API patterns, HTTP caching |
| models.md | Concerns, state records, callbacks, scopes, POROs, authorization, broadcasting |
| frontend.md | Turbo Streams, Stimulus controllers, CSS layers, OKLCH colors, partials |
| architecture.md | Routing, authentication, jobs, Current attributes, caching, database patterns |
| testing.md | Minitest, fixtures, unit/integration/system tests, testing patterns |
| gems.md | What they use vs avoid, decision framework, Gemfile examples |
| \x3C/reference_index> |
\x3Csuccess_criteria> Code follows DHH style when:
- Controllers map to CRUD verbs on resources
- Models use concerns for horizontal behavior
- State is tracked via records, not booleans
- No unnecessary service objects or abstractions
- Database-backed solutions preferred over external services
- Tests use Minitest with fixtures
- Turbo/Stimulus for interactivity (no heavy JS frameworks)
- Native CSS with modern features (layers, OKLCH, nesting)
- Authorization logic lives on User model
- Jobs are shallow wrappers calling model methods \x3C/success_criteria>
\x3Ccredits> Based on The Unofficial 37signals/DHH Rails Style Guide by Marc Köhlbrugge, generated through deep analysis of 265 pull requests from the Fizzy codebase.
Important Disclaimers:
- LLM-generated guide - may contain inaccuracies
- Code examples from Fizzy are licensed under the O'Saasy License
- Not affiliated with or endorsed by 37signals \x3C/credits>
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install dhh-rails-style - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/dhh-rails-style - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Dhh Rails Style?
This skill should be used when writing Ruby and Rails code in DHH's distinctive 37signals style. It applies when writing Ruby code, Rails applications, creat... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 344 downloads so far.
How do I install Dhh Rails Style?
Run "/install dhh-rails-style" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Dhh Rails Style free?
Yes, Dhh Rails Style is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Dhh Rails Style support?
Dhh Rails Style is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Dhh Rails Style?
It is built and maintained by skye (@pixelxiao); the current version is v0.1.0.