From Design
Open a running local app in Design overview mode as URL-backed iframe screens for visual editing, flow review, duplication, and route-state exploration. Use when the user asks to inspect, compare, or edit a real local app visually in Design.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/agent-native-design:visual-editThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Use `/visual-edit` when the user wants to inspect or edit a real local app
Use /visual-edit when the user wants to inspect or edit a real local app
visually instead of generating standalone Alpine HTML. The source of truth is
the running localhost app plus its route URLs. Design shows those routes as
iframe-backed screens on the infinite canvas.
connectionId, routeId, path,
url, bridgeUrl, title, and viewport size./checkout?step=shipping,
/checkout?step=payment, /checkout?step=done, etc.localhost:1234/onboarding/1 means
http://localhost:1234/onboarding/1./visual-edit entry route can open before the viewer signs in. Public
/design/:id editor links can also render read-only public designs without a
session./_agent-native/open deep links.
Do not surface URLs with _session= tokens. Query sessions are only a
fallback after normal cookie resolution, so an existing browser session can
still open the design as a different user and show "Design not found".The live-edit bridge is unlocked by a shared secret (the "bridge token") that
must match on two sides: the local bridge process, and the user's connection row
in Design (which the browser reads to authorize /live-edit-bridge,
/read-file, /write-file). Get them to match by letting the
authenticated open-visual-edit action mint the token, then starting the
bridge with it. This is the only ordering that works for the remote-MCP flow —
the bridge cannot push its own token to the server without a CLI auth token, so
the server mints instead and the bridge adopts.
From the target app repo, make sure its dev server is running, then:
1. Discover routes without starting a durable bridge (one-shot, exits):
npx @agent-native/core@latest design connect --url http://localhost:5173 --root . --json
This prints the manifest (routes + capabilities). Parse it to build
routeManifest for the next step. (Skip this if the user already gave explicit
paths/URLs to place.)
2. Call open-visual-edit (see Action Flow below) with NO bridgeToken.
The server mints one, stores it on the user's connection row, copies it into the
placed screens' metadata, and returns it to you as bridgeToken. Capture it.
3. Start the persistent bridge adopting that token (single line; prefer the
env var so the secret does not appear in ps):
AGENT_NATIVE_BRIDGE_TOKEN="<bridgeToken from step 2>" npx @agent-native/core@latest design connect --url http://localhost:5173 --root . --daemon
(Equivalently, pass --bridge-token <token>.) This starts a detached bridge on
http://127.0.0.1:7331, adopts the server-minted token — so bridge and row
agree and live-edit authorizes with no self-registration — and stays alive after
the command exits.
For a manual health/manifest check on the running bridge:
curl http://127.0.0.1:7331/manifest.json
Only use --json for the step-1 route probe. Never use --json, --once,
or --dry-run for the durable step-3 bridge: they print the manifest and exit,
so Design falls back to a non-editable live iframe.
Prefer the single authenticated open-visual-edit action. It registers or
refreshes the localhost bridge connection, mints and stores the bridge token,
creates or reuses a Design project, places URL-backed screens, stores the active
visual-edit context, and navigates to overview mode in one call. This avoids
creating a private design under a synthetic CLI user and then handing the browser
a tokenized URL that may be shadowed by an existing session.
Call it BEFORE starting the durable bridge (step 3 above): it does not contact
the bridge, so the bridge need not be running yet, and you need its returned
bridgeToken to start the bridge with a matching secret. Omit bridgeToken
on the call so the server mints one.
pnpm action open-visual-edit '{
"title": "Docs homepage visual edit",
"devServerUrl": "http://localhost:5173",
"bridgeUrl": "http://127.0.0.1:7331",
"rootPath": "/absolute/path/to/app",
"routeManifest": { "...": "from /manifest.json" },
"paths": ["/", "/pricing", "/checkout?step=payment"]
}'
The action returns designId, connectionId, bridgeToken, screens,
urlPath, and openUrl. Keep designId/connectionId in the chat context
for follow-ups, and pass bridgeToken to design connect (step 3) to start
the bridge. On follow-up calls reusing an existing connectionId, the same
token is returned (it is minted once and reused), so the running bridge stays
valid.
For a numbered flow the user describes in chat, keep the labels and order:
pnpm action open-visual-edit '{
"designId": "<existing-design-id>",
"connectionId": "<existing-connection-id>",
"devServerUrl": "http://localhost:1234",
"routes": [
{ "url": "localhost:1234/onboarding/1", "title": "Screen 1" },
{ "url": "localhost:1234/onboarding/2", "title": "Screen 2" },
{ "url": "localhost:1234/onboarding/3", "title": "Screen 3" }
]
}'
For responsive follow-ups, call open-visual-edit again with the same
designId and connectionId, plus explicit viewport dimensions:
pnpm action open-visual-edit '{
"designId": "<existing-design-id>",
"connectionId": "<existing-connection-id>",
"devServerUrl": "http://localhost:5173",
"paths": ["/"],
"defaultWidth": 390,
"defaultHeight": 844,
"startX": 1600,
"startY": 0
}'
If no routes or paths are supplied, open-visual-edit uses every route
from the localhost manifest.
Fallback, only when open-visual-edit is unavailable:
connect-localhost, passing the
/manifest.json result as routeManifest and capabilities.create-design.add-localhost-screens.navigate.link, deepLink, or MCP App embed returned by Design actions so
the user sees the canvas. In Codex Desktop or VS Code, prefer opening that
Design URL in the available preview/webview panel; otherwise surface the
"Open design" link.openUrl / action link, not a hand-built
/design/:id?_session=... URL.vscode://builder.agent-native/open?url=<encoded-design-url>. Its
Agent Native: Open Design Canvas command also starts the local bridge and
opens hosted Design in the VS Code side panel.add-localhost-screens, confirm the Design editor is in overview mode
with the requested URL-backed frames visible. Do not stop at "screens added"
when the user asked to inspect or edit visually.Keep localhost screens as URL files plus screenMetadata[fileId]. Do not
replace them with copied srcdoc HTML unless the user explicitly asks for a
frozen snapshot. To change a state, rerun add-localhost-screens with the new
path/query or duplicate the screen and update the copy's URL metadata.
.map() instances, shared components, and cross-file changes go through the
coding agent with exact subject/target anchors and their runtime
relationship.versionHash to
write-local-file with requireExpectedVersionHash: true; on conflict,
re-read and re-plan. Keep the optimistic preview until HMR/runtime confirms
the result. Human write consent remains mandatory and agents cannot grant it.list-localhost-connections returns the expected connection and routes.Guides collaborative design exploration before implementation: explores context, asks clarifying questions, proposes approaches, and writes a design doc for user approval.
Creates structured, bite-sized implementation plans from specs or requirements before writing code. Useful for breaking down multi-step tasks into testable steps with file structure and task boundaries.
Implements work from a spec or tickets using TDD at agreed seams, with regular typechecking and test runs, followed by code review.
2plugins reuse this skill
First indexed Jul 14, 2026
npx claudepluginhub sidmohanty11/agent-native --plugin agent-native-design