ux-flow — quality + safety report
In the Skillier index (antigravity__ux-flow) · scanned 2026-06-03 · engine: builtin+triage
✓ Clean — no heuristic safety flags surfaced.
Heuristic flags from the builtin scanner, which is known to over-flag (it trips on legitimate env-reading integrations, security skills, and library .eval calls). This is NOT an authoritative malicious verdict — re-scan with SkillSpector for the authoritative result. Run the authoritative scan →
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Quality notes
About this skill
Design user flows and screen structure using StyleSeed UX patterns such as progressive disclosure, hub-and-spoke navigation, and information pyramids.
📄 Read the SKILL.md
--- name: ux-flow description: "Design user flows and screen structure using StyleSeed UX patterns such as progressive disclosure, hub-and-spoke navigation, and information pyramids." category: design risk: safe source: community source_repo: bitjaru/styleseed source_type: community date_added: "2026-04-08" author: bitjaru tags: [ux, flows, navigation, product-design, styleseed] tools: [claude, cursor, codex, gemini] --- # UX Flow ## Overview Part of [StyleSeed](https://github.com/bitjaru/styleseed), this skill designs flows before screens. It uses proven UX patterns to define entry points, exits, screen inventory, and navigation structure so the implementation has a coherent user journey instead of a pile of disconnected pages. ## When to Use - Use when planning onboarding, checkout, account management, dashboards, or drill-down flows - Use when a new feature spans multiple screens or modal states - Use when users need a clear path through a task instead of a single isolated page - Use when the UI needs navigation logic before components are built ## How It Works ### Information Architecture Principles - progressive disclosure: reveal complexity only when needed - Miller's Law: chunk content into manageable groups - Hick's Law: minimize decision overload on each screen ### Common Navigation Models - hub and spoke for dashboards and detail views - linear flow for onboarding, forms, and checkout - tab navigation for 3 to 5 top-level areas ### Flow Rules - every flow has a clear entry point - every flow has a clear exit or success condition - key features should usually be reachable within three taps from home - non-root screens need back navigation - loading, empty, and error states need explicit recovery paths ## Output Provide: 1. An ASCII flow diagram 2. A screen inventory with each screen's purpose 3. Edge cases for loading, empty, and error states 4. Recommended page scaffolds and reusable patterns to implement next ## Best Practices - Optimize for clarity before density - Let one screen answer one primary question - Keep escape hatches visible for risky or destructive steps - Define state transitions before drawing detailed layouts ## Additional Resources - [StyleSeed repository](https://github.com/bitjaru/styleseed) - [Source skill](https://github.com/bitjaru/styleseed/blob/main/seeds/toss/.claude/skills/ux-flow/SKILL.md) ## Limitations - Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above. - Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review. - Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.
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Graded independently by Skillproof — nothing to sell the author. Quality is mechanical + corpus-grounded; safety flags are heuristic (builtin+triage), not a malicious verdict.