Agent skill

layout

Improve layout, spacing, and visual rhythm. Fixes monotonous grids, inconsistent spacing, and weak visual hierarchy. Use when the user mentions layout feeling off, spacing issues, visual hierarchy, crowded UI, alignment problems, or wanting better composition.

Stars 221
Forks 17

Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/mxyhi/ok-skills/tree/main/impeccable/layout

SKILL.md

Assess and improve layout and spacing that feels monotonous, crowded, or structurally weak — turning generic arrangements into intentional, rhythmic compositions.

MANDATORY PREPARATION

Invoke /impeccable — it contains design principles, anti-patterns, and the Context Gathering Protocol. Follow the protocol before proceeding — if no design context exists yet, you MUST run /impeccable teach first.


Assess Current Layout

Analyze what's weak about the current spatial design:

  1. Spacing:

    • Is spacing consistent or arbitrary? (Random padding/margin values)
    • Is all spacing the same? (Equal padding everywhere = no rhythm)
    • Are related elements grouped tightly, with generous space between groups?
  2. Visual hierarchy:

    • Apply the squint test: blur your (metaphorical) eyes — can you still identify the most important element, second most important, and clear groupings?
    • Is hierarchy achieved effectively? (Space and weight alone can be enough — but is the current approach working?)
    • Does whitespace guide the eye to what matters?
  3. Grid & structure:

    • Is there a clear underlying structure, or does the layout feel random?
    • Are identical card grids used everywhere? (Icon + heading + text, repeated endlessly)
    • Is everything centered? (Left-aligned with asymmetric layouts feels more designed, but not a hard and fast rule)
  4. Rhythm & variety:

    • Does the layout have visual rhythm? (Alternating tight/generous spacing)
    • Is every section structured the same way? (Monotonous repetition)
    • Are there intentional moments of surprise or emphasis?
  5. Density:

    • Is the layout too cramped? (Not enough breathing room)
    • Is the layout too sparse? (Excessive whitespace without purpose)
    • Does density match the content type? (Data-dense UIs need tighter spacing; marketing pages need more air)

CRITICAL: Layout problems are often the root cause of interfaces feeling "off" even when colors and fonts are fine. Space is a design material — use it with intention.

Plan Layout Improvements

Consult the spatial design reference from the impeccable skill for detailed guidance on grids, rhythm, and container queries.

Create a systematic plan:

  • Spacing system: Use a consistent scale — whether that's a framework's built-in scale (e.g., Tailwind), rem-based tokens, or a custom system. The specific values matter less than consistency.
  • Hierarchy strategy: How will space communicate importance?
  • Layout approach: What structure fits the content? Flex for 1D, Grid for 2D, named areas for complex page layouts.
  • Rhythm: Where should spacing be tight vs generous?

Improve Layout Systematically

Establish a Spacing System

  • Use a consistent spacing scale — framework scales (Tailwind, etc.), rem-based tokens, or a custom scale all work. What matters is that values come from a defined set, not arbitrary numbers.
  • Name tokens semantically if using custom properties: --space-xs through --space-xl, not --spacing-8
  • Use gap for sibling spacing instead of margins — eliminates margin collapse hacks
  • Apply clamp() for fluid spacing that breathes on larger screens

Create Visual Rhythm

  • Tight grouping for related elements (8-12px between siblings)
  • Generous separation between distinct sections (48-96px)
  • Varied spacing within sections — not every row needs the same gap
  • Asymmetric compositions — break the predictable centered-content pattern when it makes sense

Choose the Right Layout Tool

  • Use Flexbox for 1D layouts: Rows of items, nav bars, button groups, card contents, most component internals. Flex is simpler and more appropriate for the majority of layout tasks.
  • Use Grid for 2D layouts: Page-level structure, dashboards, data-dense interfaces, anything where rows AND columns need coordinated control.
  • Don't default to Grid when Flexbox with flex-wrap would be simpler and more flexible.
  • Use repeat(auto-fit, minmax(280px, 1fr)) for responsive grids without breakpoints.
  • Use named grid areas (grid-template-areas) for complex page layouts — redefine at breakpoints.

Break Card Grid Monotony

  • Don't default to card grids for everything — spacing and alignment create visual grouping naturally
  • Use cards only when content is truly distinct and actionable — never nest cards inside cards
  • Vary card sizes, span columns, or mix cards with non-card content to break repetition

Strengthen Visual Hierarchy

  • Use the fewest dimensions needed for clear hierarchy. Space alone can be enough — generous whitespace around an element draws the eye. Some of the most sophisticated designs achieve rhythm with just space and weight. Add color or size contrast only when simpler means aren't sufficient.
  • Be aware of reading flow — in LTR languages, the eye naturally scans top-left to bottom-right, but primary action placement depends on context (e.g., bottom-right in dialogs, top in navigation).
  • Create clear content groupings through proximity and separation.

Manage Depth & Elevation

  • Create a semantic z-index scale (dropdown → sticky → modal-backdrop → modal → toast → tooltip)
  • Build a consistent shadow scale (sm → md → lg → xl) — shadows should be subtle
  • Use elevation to reinforce hierarchy, not as decoration

Optical Adjustments

  • If an icon looks visually off-center despite being geometrically centered, nudge it — but only if you're confident it actually looks wrong. Don't adjust speculatively.

NEVER:

  • Use arbitrary spacing values outside your scale
  • Make all spacing equal — variety creates hierarchy
  • Wrap everything in cards — not everything needs a container
  • Nest cards inside cards — use spacing and dividers for hierarchy within
  • Use identical card grids everywhere (icon + heading + text, repeated)
  • Center everything — left-aligned with asymmetry feels more designed
  • Default to the hero metric layout (big number, small label, stats, gradient) as a template. If showing real user data, a prominent metric can work — but it should display actual data, not decorative numbers.
  • Default to CSS Grid when Flexbox would be simpler — use the simplest tool for the job
  • Use arbitrary z-index values (999, 9999) — build a semantic scale

Verify Layout Improvements

  • Squint test: Can you identify primary, secondary, and groupings with blurred vision?
  • Rhythm: Does the page have a satisfying beat of tight and generous spacing?
  • Hierarchy: Is the most important content obvious within 2 seconds?
  • Breathing room: Does the layout feel comfortable, not cramped or wasteful?
  • Consistency: Is the spacing system applied uniformly?
  • Responsiveness: Does the layout adapt gracefully across screen sizes?

Remember: Space is the most underused design tool. A layout with the right rhythm and hierarchy can make even simple content feel polished and intentional.

Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.

mxyhi/ok-skills

ai-elements

Build AI chat interfaces using ai-elements components — conversations, messages, tool displays, prompt inputs, and more. Use when the user wants to build a chatbot, AI assistant UI, or any AI-powered chat interface.

221 17
Explore
mxyhi/ok-skills

opensrc

Fetch dependency source code to give AI agents deeper implementation context. Use when the agent needs to understand how a library works internally, read source code for a package, fetch implementation details for a dependency, or explore how an npm/PyPI/crates.io package is built. Triggers include "fetch source for", "read the source of", "how does X work internally", "get the implementation of", "opensrc path", or any task requiring access to dependency source code beyond types and docs.

221 17
Explore
mxyhi/ok-skills

test-driven-development

Use when implementing any feature or bugfix, before writing implementation code

221 17
Explore
mxyhi/ok-skills

dogfood

Systematically explore and test a web application to find bugs, UX issues, and other problems. Use when asked to "dogfood", "QA", "exploratory test", "find issues", "bug hunt", "test this app/site/platform", or review the quality of a web application. Produces a structured report with full reproduction evidence -- step-by-step screenshots, repro videos, and detailed repro steps for every issue -- so findings can be handed directly to the responsible teams.

221 17
Explore
mxyhi/ok-skills

minimax-pdf

Use this skill when visual quality and design identity matter for a PDF. CREATE (generate from scratch): "make a PDF", "generate a report", "write a proposal", "create a resume", "beautiful PDF", "professional document", "cover page", "polished PDF", "client-ready document". FILL (complete form fields): "fill in the form", "fill out this PDF", "complete the form fields", "write values into PDF", "what fields does this PDF have". REFORMAT (apply design to an existing doc): "reformat this document", "apply our style", "convert this Markdown/text to PDF", "make this doc look good", "re-style this PDF". This skill uses a token-based design system: color, typography, and spacing are derived from the document type and flow through every page. The output is print-ready. Prefer this skill when appearance matters, not just when any PDF output is needed.

221 17
Explore
mxyhi/ok-skills

get-api-docs

Use this skill when you need documentation for a third-party library, SDK, or API before writing code that uses it — for example, "use the OpenAI API", "call the Stripe API", "use the Anthropic SDK", "query Pinecone", or any time the user asks you to write code against an external service and you need current API reference. Fetch the docs with chub before answering, rather than relying on training knowledge.

221 17
Explore

Didn't find tool you were looking for?

Be as detailed as possible for better results