Agent skill
feature-flags
Generate feature flag infrastructure with local defaults, remote configuration, SwiftUI integration, and debug menu. Use when adding feature flags or A/B testing to iOS/macOS apps.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/rshankras/claude-code-apple-skills/tree/main/skills/generators/feature-flags
SKILL.md
Feature Flags Generator
Generate a complete feature flag infrastructure with typed flag definitions, protocol-based providers (local, remote, composite), SwiftUI environment integration, an @Observable manager, and a debug menu for toggling flags at runtime.
When This Skill Activates
Use this skill when the user:
- Asks to "add feature flags" or "add feature toggles"
- Mentions A/B testing or gradual rollouts
- Asks about Firebase Remote Config or similar remote configuration
- Wants to disable features without shipping an app update
- Mentions "kill switches" or "feature gates"
- Wants to control features remotely for a subset of users
- Asks for a debug menu to toggle features during development
Pre-Generation Checks
1. Project Context Detection
- Check for existing feature flag implementations
- Check for Firebase Remote Config or third-party flag SDKs
- Identify source file locations (Sources/, App/, or root)
- Verify minimum deployment target (iOS 17+ / macOS 14+ for @Observable)
2. Conflict Detection
Search for existing feature flag code:
Glob: **/*FeatureFlag*.swift, **/*FeatureToggle*.swift, **/*RemoteConfig*.swift
Grep: "FeatureFlag" or "FeatureToggle" or "RemoteConfig" or "isFeatureEnabled"
If existing feature flag code is found:
- Ask whether to replace or extend the existing implementation
- Check for flag names or enum cases that could conflict
If a third-party SDK (Firebase, LaunchDarkly, etc.) is detected:
- Ask if the user wants a standalone implementation or a wrapper around the SDK
3. Required Capabilities
Feature flags require:
- iOS 17+ / macOS 14+ deployment target (for @Observable manager)
- Network access entitlement if using remote flags
- No special Info.plist entries needed
Configuration Questions
Ask user via AskUserQuestion:
-
What features do you want to flag? (freeform)
- Examples: new onboarding, premium paywall, experimental UI, dark mode v2
- This determines the flag enum cases and their default values
-
What flag value types do you need?
- Boolean only (feature on/off)
- Boolean + String (on/off plus string configuration)
- Boolean + String + Integer (full typed support)
- Boolean + String + Integer + JSON (for complex configurations)
-
What provider architecture?
- Local only -- UserDefaults-based with compile-time defaults
- Remote only -- JSON endpoint with local caching
- Composite (recommended) -- Local defaults with remote override; remote wins when available
-
Include debug menu?
- Yes -- SwiftUI view for toggling flags at runtime (DEBUG builds only)
- No -- Skip the debug view
-
Include SwiftUI environment integration?
- Yes (recommended) -- Inject the flag manager via SwiftUI Environment
- No -- Use the manager directly
Generation Process
Step 1: Determine File Locations
Check project structure:
- If
Sources/exists -->Sources/FeatureFlags/ - If
App/exists -->App/FeatureFlags/ - Otherwise -->
FeatureFlags/
Step 2: Create Core Files
Generate these files based on configuration answers:
FeatureFlag.swift-- Flag enum with typed default valuesFeatureFlagService.swift-- Protocol defining provider interfaceLocalFeatureFlagProvider.swift-- UserDefaults-based provider with debug overridesRemoteFeatureFlagProvider.swift-- URL-based provider with disk caching (if remote or composite)CompositeFeatureFlagProvider.swift-- Combines local + remote; remote overrides local (if composite)FeatureFlagManager.swift-- @Observable manager for SwiftUIFeatureFlagEnvironmentKey.swift-- SwiftUI Environment integration (if requested)FeatureFlagDebugView.swift-- Debug toggle view (if requested)
Step 3: Generate Code from Templates
Use the templates in templates.md and customize based on user answers:
- Replace placeholder flag cases with real feature names
- Set appropriate default values per flag
- Include or exclude remote/composite providers based on architecture choice
- Include or exclude typed value methods (string, int, JSON) based on type selection
- Include or exclude environment key and debug view
Output Format
After generation, provide:
Files Created
Sources/FeatureFlags/
├── FeatureFlag.swift # Flag enum with typed defaults
├── FeatureFlagService.swift # Provider protocol
├── LocalFeatureFlagProvider.swift # UserDefaults-based provider
├── RemoteFeatureFlagProvider.swift # URL-based provider (if remote/composite)
├── CompositeFeatureFlagProvider.swift # Local + remote combiner (if composite)
├── FeatureFlagManager.swift # @Observable manager for SwiftUI
├── FeatureFlagEnvironmentKey.swift # SwiftUI Environment key (if requested)
└── FeatureFlagDebugView.swift # Debug toggle menu (if requested)
Integration Steps
1. Initialize the manager in your App struct or entry point:
import SwiftUI
@main
struct MyApp: App {
@State private var featureFlagManager: FeatureFlagManager
init() {
// Local only
let provider = LocalFeatureFlagProvider()
// Or composite (remote overrides local)
// let provider = CompositeFeatureFlagProvider(
// local: LocalFeatureFlagProvider(),
// remote: RemoteFeatureFlagProvider(
// endpoint: URL(string: "https://api.example.com/flags")!
// )
// )
_featureFlagManager = State(initialValue: FeatureFlagManager(provider: provider))
}
var body: some Scene {
WindowGroup {
ContentView()
.environment(featureFlagManager)
}
}
}
2. Use flags in your views:
struct ContentView: View {
@Environment(FeatureFlagManager.self) private var flags
var body: some View {
VStack {
if flags.isEnabled(.newOnboarding) {
NewOnboardingView()
} else {
LegacyOnboardingView()
}
}
}
}
3. Refresh remote flags (if using remote or composite):
// Refresh on app launch or periodically
Task {
try await featureFlagManager.refresh()
}
4. Add debug menu (if generated, DEBUG builds only):
#if DEBUG
NavigationLink("Feature Flags") {
FeatureFlagDebugView()
.environment(featureFlagManager)
}
#endif
Testing Instructions
- Unit test providers independently: Each provider conforms to
FeatureFlagServiceand can be tested in isolation. - Mock provider for previews and tests:
swift
final class MockFeatureFlagProvider: FeatureFlagService { var overrides: [FeatureFlag: Bool] = [:] func isEnabled(_ flag: FeatureFlag) -> Bool { overrides[flag] ?? flag.defaultValue } // ... implement remaining protocol methods } - Debug menu: Run in DEBUG builds, navigate to the debug menu, and toggle flags to verify behavior.
- Remote provider: Use a local JSON file served via a test server or mock URLProtocol to test remote fetching.
Common Patterns
Boolean Flags (Kill Switches)
The most common pattern. Enable or disable a feature entirely.
if flags.isEnabled(.premiumPaywall) {
PremiumPaywallView()
}
String Flags (Copy Variants / A/B Testing)
Use string values to serve different text or configuration strings remotely.
let welcomeMessage = flags.stringValue(.welcomeMessage) ?? "Welcome!"
Text(welcomeMessage)
Integer Flags (Thresholds / Limits)
Control numeric parameters like retry counts, page sizes, or rate limits.
let maxRetries = flags.intValue(.maxRetries) ?? 3
JSON Flags (Complex Configuration)
For structured configuration that changes server-side.
struct PaywallConfig: Codable {
let title: String
let trialDays: Int
let showTestimonials: Bool
}
if let config: PaywallConfig = flags.jsonValue(.paywallConfig) {
PaywallView(config: config)
}
Gradual Rollout
Combine feature flags with user segmentation.
// Server returns different flag values per user segment
// The flag is simply on/off from the client perspective
if flags.isEnabled(.newCheckoutFlow) {
NewCheckoutView()
} else {
LegacyCheckoutView()
}
Gotchas
- Stale flags: Always provide sensible local defaults. If the remote fetch fails, the app must still function correctly with local values.
- Flag cleanup: After a feature is fully rolled out, remove the flag enum case, delete related conditional code, and clean up remote configuration. Stale flags accumulate technical debt.
- Thread safety: The generated
FeatureFlagManageris@MainActor-isolated. Access it on the main thread or via@Environmentin SwiftUI views. The providers useSendable-conforming storage. - Testing both paths: When a flag controls a UI branch, write tests (or at least manual test plans) for both the enabled and disabled paths. It is easy to forget the disabled path once a flag has been on for weeks.
- Debug overrides in production: The debug override mechanism uses
#if DEBUGguards. Double-check that debug toggles never leak into release builds. - Cache invalidation: The remote provider caches to disk. Set an appropriate
cacheDuration(default 5 minutes). For time-sensitive flags, callrefresh()explicitly. - UserDefaults key collisions: All flag keys are prefixed with
ff_to avoid collisions with other UserDefaults entries in the app.
References
- templates.md -- Production-ready Swift templates for all generated files
- Feature Toggles (Martin Fowler)
- Firebase Remote Config
Recommended Agent Skills
Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.
legal
Legal document generation and compliance guidance for indie Apple developers. Covers privacy policies, terms of service, EULAs, GDPR/CCPA/DPDP compliance, and Apple App Store legal requirements. Use when user needs legal documents or compliance guidance.
privacy-policy
Generate privacy policies, terms of service, and EULAs for Apple platform apps. Detects data collection patterns, third-party SDKs, and generates region-specific legal documents with Apple Privacy Nutrition Label mapping. Use when user needs legal documents or data collection disclosure for App Store submission.
ios-development
Comprehensive iOS development guidance including Swift best practices, SwiftUI patterns, UI/UX review against HIG, and app planning. Use for iOS code review, best practices, accessibility audits, or planning new iOS apps.
assistive-access
Assistive Access implementation for cognitive accessibility including simplified scenes, navigation icons, runtime detection, and design principles. Use when optimizing apps for Assistive Access mode.
ui-review
Review SwiftUI code for iOS/watchOS Human Interface Guidelines compliance, font usage, Dynamic Type support, and accessibility. Use when user mentions UI review, HIG, accessibility audit, font checks, or wants to verify interface design against Apple standards.
navigation-patterns
SwiftUI navigation architecture patterns including NavigationStack, NavigationSplitView, TabView, programmatic navigation, and custom transitions. Use when reviewing or building navigation, fixing navigation bugs, or architecting app flow.
Didn't find tool you were looking for?