--- name: frontend-code-review description: "Trigger when the user requests a review of frontend files (e.g., `.tsx`, `.ts`, `.js`). Support both pending-change reviews and focused file reviews while applying the checklist rules." --- # Frontend Code Review ## Intent Use this skill whenever the user asks to review frontend code (especially `.tsx`, `.ts`, or `.js` files). Support two review modes: 1. **Pending-change review** – inspect staged/working-tree files slated for commit and flag checklist violations before submission. 2. **File-targeted review** – review the specific file(s) the user names and report the relevant checklist findings. Stick to the checklist below for every applicable file and mode. ## Checklist See [references/code-quality.md](references/code-quality.md), [references/performance.md](references/performance.md), [references/business-logic.md](references/business-logic.md) for the living checklist split by category—treat it as the canonical set of rules to follow. Flag each rule violation with urgency metadata so future reviewers can prioritize fixes. ## Review Process 1. Open the relevant component/module. Gather lines that relate to class names, React Flow hooks, prop memoization, and styling. 2. For each rule in the review point, note where the code deviates and capture a representative snippet. 3. Compose the review section per the template below. Group violations first by **Urgent** flag, then by category order (Code Quality, Performance, Business Logic). ## Required output When invoked, the response must exactly follow one of the two templates: ### Template A (any findings) ``` # Code review Found urgent issues need to be fixed: ## 1 FilePath: line ### Suggested fix --- ... (repeat for each urgent issue) ... Found suggestions for improvement: ## 1 FilePath: line ### Suggested fix --- ... (repeat for each suggestion) ... ``` If there are no urgent issues, omit that section. If there are no suggestions, omit that section. If the issue number is more than 10, summarize as "10+ urgent issues" or "10+ suggestions" and just output the first 10 issues. Don't compress the blank lines between sections; keep them as-is for readability. If you use Template A (i.e., there are issues to fix) and at least one issue requires code changes, append a brief follow-up question after the structured output asking whether the user wants you to apply the suggested fix(es). For example: "Would you like me to use the Suggested fix section to address these issues?" ### Template B (no issues) ``` ## Code review No issues found. ```