Guides Clojure and ClojureScript development with REPL-driven workflow, coding conventions, and best practices. Use when writing, developing, or refactoring Clojure/ClojureScript code.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/metabase-clojure-write:clojure-writeThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
When `clojure-mcp` tools are available (e.g., `clojure_eval`, `clojure_edit`), **always use them**
When clojure-mcp tools are available (e.g., clojure_eval, clojure_edit), always use them
instead of shell commands like ./bin/mage -repl. The MCP tools provide:
Only fall back to ./bin/mage commands when clojure-mcp is not available.
@./../_shared/development-workflow.md @./../_shared/clojure-style-guide.md @./../_shared/clojure-commands.md
./bin/mage -repl --namespace metabase.app-db.connection
deftest and is.A docstring is a contract for the caller, not a diary for the implementer. It states what the function does, what it takes, returns, throws, and the preconditions/invariants the caller must respect. Those guarantees and requirements belong there — they are exactly what the caller needs surfaced in the IDE.
When you find implementation context in a docstring, the default is to relocate it, not delete it — move it to an inline comment at the point in the body where it is actually relevant. That context is often genuinely valuable; it is just in the wrong place (the caller should not have to read it; the implementer standing at that line should). Delete outright only when it is blather: self-congratulation, restating the obvious, or documenting a property that is the expected default.
On that last case — narrating properties like "portable across all supported appdbs" earns no sentence. If it were not portable, that is either a bug, or it means callers must handle each case themselves — and in that case it is the absence of the property that must be documented. Document deviations from expectation, not conformance to it.
Heuristic: if a sentence would still be true after a full rewrite of the body, it may belong in the docstring. If it describes how the current body works, it belongs in the body — as an inline comment, if it is non-obvious.
Multi-line docstrings are not banned — a genuinely non-obvious constraint the code had to deal with can be worth explaining. But be prudent; the failure mode is far too much detail. When tempted to write a multi-paragraph explanatory docstring, check with the user first. And prefer a test to prose: if a future reader thinks "that's a silly way to do it" and changes it, a test should fail and tell them why. If that breakage keeps happening, that is the signal a comment was warranted.
-check-readablesrc namespace, a cross-module require
or :model/X reference, or a new module), run ./bin/mage fix-modules-config to regenerate
.clj-kondo/config/modules/config.edn and keep metabase.core.modules-test green. No-op when nothing
drifted; see "Module Boundaries" in the project CLAUDE.md.npx claudepluginhub p/metabase-metabase-clojure-write-claude-skills-clojure-writeReviews Clojure/ClojureScript code changes for compliance with Metabase coding standards, style violations, and code quality issues during pull request review.
Provides CIDER integration for Clojure nREPL development: jack-in to start REPL, eval defun at point, eval buffer. For interactive REPL sessions.
Guides functional programming in Clojure: spec-validated domain modeling, REPL-driven prototyping, auto-generated tests, threading macros, and error pipelines.