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.

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Forks 10

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:

  1. 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
  2. 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)
  3. 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
  4. Include debug menu?

    • Yes -- SwiftUI view for toggling flags at runtime (DEBUG builds only)
    • No -- Skip the debug view
  5. 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:

  1. FeatureFlag.swift -- Flag enum with typed default values
  2. FeatureFlagService.swift -- Protocol defining provider interface
  3. LocalFeatureFlagProvider.swift -- UserDefaults-based provider with debug overrides
  4. RemoteFeatureFlagProvider.swift -- URL-based provider with disk caching (if remote or composite)
  5. CompositeFeatureFlagProvider.swift -- Combines local + remote; remote overrides local (if composite)
  6. FeatureFlagManager.swift -- @Observable manager for SwiftUI
  7. FeatureFlagEnvironmentKey.swift -- SwiftUI Environment integration (if requested)
  8. 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:

swift
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:

swift
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):

swift
// Refresh on app launch or periodically
Task {
    try await featureFlagManager.refresh()
}

4. Add debug menu (if generated, DEBUG builds only):

swift
#if DEBUG
NavigationLink("Feature Flags") {
    FeatureFlagDebugView()
        .environment(featureFlagManager)
}
#endif

Testing Instructions

  1. Unit test providers independently: Each provider conforms to FeatureFlagService and can be tested in isolation.
  2. 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
    }
    
  3. Debug menu: Run in DEBUG builds, navigate to the debug menu, and toggle flags to verify behavior.
  4. 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.

swift
if flags.isEnabled(.premiumPaywall) {
    PremiumPaywallView()
}

String Flags (Copy Variants / A/B Testing)

Use string values to serve different text or configuration strings remotely.

swift
let welcomeMessage = flags.stringValue(.welcomeMessage) ?? "Welcome!"
Text(welcomeMessage)

Integer Flags (Thresholds / Limits)

Control numeric parameters like retry counts, page sizes, or rate limits.

swift
let maxRetries = flags.intValue(.maxRetries) ?? 3

JSON Flags (Complex Configuration)

For structured configuration that changes server-side.

swift
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.

swift
// 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 FeatureFlagManager is @MainActor-isolated. Access it on the main thread or via @Environment in SwiftUI views. The providers use Sendable-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 DEBUG guards. 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, call refresh() explicitly.
  • UserDefaults key collisions: All flag keys are prefixed with ff_ to avoid collisions with other UserDefaults entries in the app.

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