Agent skill

hig-platforms

Apple Human Interface Guidelines for platform-specific design. Use this skill when the user asks about designing for iOS, iPad app design, macOS design, tvOS, visionOS, watchOS, Apple platform, which platform, platform differences, platform-specific conventions, or multi-platform app design. Also use when the user says should I design differently for iPad vs iPhone, how does my app work on visionOS, what's different about macOS apps, porting my app to another platform, universal app design, or what input methods does this platform use. Cross-references: hig-foundations for shared design foundations, hig-patterns for interaction patterns, hig-components-layout for navigation structures, hig-components-content for content display.

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Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/aiskillstore/marketplace/tree/main/skills/sickn33/hig-platforms

SKILL.md

Apple HIG: Platform Design

Check for .claude/apple-design-context.md before asking questions. Use existing context and only ask for information not already covered.

Key Principles

  1. Each platform has a distinct identity. Do not port designs between platforms. Respect each platform's conventions, interaction models, and user expectations.

  2. iOS: touch-first. Direct manipulation on a handheld screen. Optimize for one-handed use. Navigation uses tab bars and push/pop stacks.

  3. iPadOS: expanded canvas. Support Split View, Slide Over, and Stage Manager. Use sidebars and multi-column layouts. Support pointer and keyboard alongside touch.

  4. macOS: pointer and keyboard. Dense information display is acceptable. Use menu bars, toolbars, and keyboard shortcuts extensively. Windows are resizable with precise control.

  5. tvOS: remote and focus. Viewed from a distance. Design for the Siri Remote with focus-based navigation. Large text, simple layouts, linear navigation.

  6. visionOS: spatial interaction. 3D environment using windows, volumes, and spaces. Eye tracking for targeting, indirect gestures for interaction. Respect ergonomic comfort zones.

  7. watchOS: glanceable and brief. Information consumable at a glance. Brief interactions. Digital Crown, haptics, and complications for timely content.

  8. Games: own paradigm. Free to define in-game interaction models, but still respect platform conventions for system interactions (notifications, accessibility, controllers).

Reference Index

Reference Topic Key content
designing-for-ios.md iOS Touch, tab bars, navigation stacks, gestures, screen sizes, safe areas
designing-for-ipados.md iPadOS Multitasking, sidebars, pointer, keyboard, Apple Pencil, Stage Manager
designing-for-macos.md macOS Menu bars, toolbars, window management, keyboard shortcuts, dense layouts, Dock
designing-for-tvos.md tvOS Focus engine, Siri Remote, lean-back experience, content-forward, parallax
designing-for-visionos.md visionOS Spatial computing, windows/volumes/spaces, eye tracking, hand gestures, depth
designing-for-watchos.md watchOS Glanceable UI, Digital Crown, complications, notifications, haptics
designing-for-games.md Games Controllers, immersive experiences, platform-specific conventions, accessibility

Decision Framework

  1. Identify the primary use context. On the go (iOS/watchOS), at a desk (macOS), on the couch (tvOS), spatial environment (visionOS)?

  2. Match input to interaction. Touch for direct manipulation, pointer for precision, gaze+gesture for spatial, Digital Crown for quick scrolling, remote for focus navigation.

  3. Adapt, don't replicate. A macOS sidebar becomes a tab bar on iPhone. A visionOS volume has no equivalent on watchOS. Translate intent, not implementation.

  4. Leverage platform strengths. Live Activities on iOS, Desktop Widgets on macOS, complications on watchOS, immersive spaces on visionOS.

  5. Maintain brand consistency while respecting each platform's visual language and interaction patterns.

Output Format

  1. Platform-specific recommendations citing relevant HIG sections.
  2. Platform differences table comparing navigation, input, layout, and conventions.
  3. Implementation notes per platform including recommended APIs and adaptation strategies.

Questions to Ask

  1. Which platforms are you targeting?
  2. New app or adapting an existing one? If existing, which platform is the base?
  3. SwiftUI or UIKit/AppKit?
  4. Need to support older OS versions?
  5. Primary use context? (On the go, desk, couch, spatial, glanceable?)

Related Skills

  • hig-foundations -- Shared principles (color, typography, accessibility, layout) across platforms
  • hig-patterns -- Interaction patterns that manifest differently per platform
  • hig-components-layout -- Navigation structures (tab bars, sidebars, split views) that vary by platform
  • hig-components-content -- Content display that adapts across platforms

Built by Raintree Technology · More developer tools

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This skill is applicable to execute the workflow or actions described in the overview.

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