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@sachincool/tinker
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SKILL.md

name threejs-builder
description Creates simple Three.js web apps with scene setup, lighting, geometries, materials, animations, and responsive rendering. Use for: "Create a threejs scene/app/showcase" or when user wants 3D web content. Supports ES modules, modern Three.js r150+ APIs.

Three.js Builder

A focused skill for creating simple, performant Three.js web applications using modern ES module patterns.

Philosophy: The Scene Graph Mental Model

Three.js is built on the scene graph—a hierarchical tree of objects where parent transformations affect children. Understanding this mental model is key to effective 3D web development.

Before creating a Three.js app, ask:

  • What is the core visual element? (geometry, shape, model)
  • What interaction does the user need? (none, orbit controls, custom input)
  • What performance constraints exist? (mobile, desktop, WebGL capabilities)
  • What animation brings it to life? (rotation, movement, transitions)

Core principles:

  1. Scene Graph First: Everything added to scene renders. Use Group for hierarchical transforms.
  2. Primitives as Building Blocks: Built-in geometries (Box, Sphere, Torus) cover 80% of simple use cases.
  3. Animation as Transformation: Change position/rotation/scale over time using requestAnimationFrame or renderer.setAnimationLoop.
  4. Performance Through Simplicity: Fewer objects, fewer draw calls, reusable geometries/materials.

Quick Start: Essential Setup

Minimal HTML Template

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
    <meta charset="UTF-8">
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
    <title>Three.js App</title>
    <style>
        * { margin: 0; padding: 0; box-sizing: border-box; }
        body { overflow: hidden; background: #000; }
        canvas { display: block; }
    </style>
</head>
<body>
    <script type="module">
        import * as THREE from 'https://unpkg.com/three@0.160.0/build/three.module.js';

        // Scene setup
        const scene = new THREE.Scene();
        const camera = new THREE.PerspectiveCamera(75, window.innerWidth / window.innerHeight, 0.1, 1000);
        const renderer = new THREE.WebGLRenderer({ antialias: true });

        renderer.setSize(window.innerWidth, window.innerHeight);
        renderer.setPixelRatio(Math.min(window.devicePixelRatio, 2));
        document.body.appendChild(renderer.domElement);

        // Your 3D content here
        // ...

        camera.position.z = 5;

        // Animation loop
        renderer.setAnimationLoop((time) => {
            renderer.render(scene, camera);
        });

        // Handle resize
        window.addEventListener('resize', () => {
            camera.aspect = window.innerWidth / window.innerHeight;
            camera.updateProjectionMatrix();
            renderer.setSize(window.innerWidth, window.innerHeight);
        });
    </script>
</body>
</html>

Geometries

Built-in primitives cover most simple app needs. Use BufferGeometry only for custom shapes.

Common primitives:

  • BoxGeometry(width, height, depth) - cubes, boxes
  • SphereGeometry(radius, widthSegments, heightSegments) - balls, planets
  • CylinderGeometry(radiusTop, radiusBottom, height) - tubes, cylinders
  • TorusGeometry(radius, tube) - donuts, rings
  • PlaneGeometry(width, height) - floors, walls, backgrounds
  • ConeGeometry(radius, height) - spikes, cones
  • IcosahedronGeometry(radius, detail) - low-poly spheres (detail=0)

Usage:

const geometry = new THREE.BoxGeometry(1, 1, 1);
const material = new THREE.MeshStandardMaterial({ color: 0x44aa88 });
const mesh = new THREE.Mesh(geometry, material);
scene.add(mesh);

Materials

Choose material based on lighting needs and visual style.

Material selection guide:

  • MeshBasicMaterial - No lighting, flat colors. Use for: UI, wireframes, unlit effects
  • MeshStandardMaterial - PBR lighting. Default for realistic surfaces
  • MeshPhysicalMaterial - Advanced PBR with clearcoat, transmission. Glass, water
  • MeshNormalMaterial - Debug, rainbow colors based on normals
  • MeshPhongMaterial - Legacy, shininess control. Faster than Standard

Common material properties:

{
    color: 0x44aa88,           // Hex color
    roughness: 0.5,            // 0=glossy, 1=matte (Standard/Physical)
    metalness: 0.0,            // 0=non-metal, 1=metal (Standard/Physical)
    emissive: 0x000000,        // Self-illumination color
    wireframe: false,          // Show edges only
    transparent: false,        // Enable transparency
    opacity: 1.0,              // 0=invisible, 1=opaque (needs transparent:true)
    side: THREE.FrontSide      // FrontSide, BackSide, DoubleSide
}

Lighting

No light = black screen (except BasicMaterial/NormalMaterial).

Light types:

  • AmbientLight(intensity) - Base illumination everywhere. Use 0.3-0.5
  • DirectionalLight(color, intensity) - Sun-like, parallel rays. Cast shadows
  • PointLight(color, intensity, distance) - Light bulb, emits in all directions
  • SpotLight(color, intensity, angle, penumbra) - Flashlight, cone of light

Typical lighting setup:

const ambientLight = new THREE.AmbientLight(0xffffff, 0.4);
scene.add(ambientLight);

const mainLight = new THREE.DirectionalLight(0xffffff, 1);
mainLight.position.set(5, 10, 7);
scene.add(mainLight);

const fillLight = new THREE.DirectionalLight(0x88ccff, 0.5);
fillLight.position.set(-5, 0, -5);
scene.add(fillLight);

Shadows (advanced, use when needed):

renderer.shadowMap.enabled = true;
renderer.shadowMap.type = THREE.PCFSoftShadowMap;

mainLight.castShadow = true;
mainLight.shadow.mapSize.width = 2048;
mainLight.shadow.mapSize.height = 2048;

mesh.castShadow = true;
mesh.receiveShadow = true;

Animation

Transform objects over time using the animation loop.

Animation patterns:

  1. Continuous rotation:
renderer.setAnimationLoop((time) => {
    mesh.rotation.x = time * 0.001;
    mesh.rotation.y = time * 0.0005;
    renderer.render(scene, camera);
});
  1. Wave/bobbing motion:
renderer.setAnimationLoop((time) => {
    mesh.position.y = Math.sin(time * 0.002) * 0.5;
    renderer.render(scene, camera);
});
  1. Mouse interaction:
const mouse = new THREE.Vector2();

window.addEventListener('mousemove', (event) => {
    mouse.x = (event.clientX / window.innerWidth) * 2 - 1;
    mouse.y = -(event.clientY / window.innerHeight) * 2 + 1;
});

renderer.setAnimationLoop(() => {
    mesh.rotation.x = mouse.y * 0.5;
    mesh.rotation.y = mouse.x * 0.5;
    renderer.render(scene, camera);
});

Camera Controls

Import OrbitControls from examples for interactive camera movement:

<script type="module">
    import * as THREE from 'https://unpkg.com/three@0.160.0/build/three.module.js';
    import { OrbitControls } from 'https://unpkg.com/three@0.160.0/examples/jsm/controls/OrbitControls.js';

    // ... scene setup ...

    const controls = new OrbitControls(camera, renderer.domElement);
    controls.enableDamping = true;
    controls.dampingFactor = 0.05;

    renderer.setAnimationLoop(() => {
        controls.update();
        renderer.render(scene, camera);
    });
</script>

Common Scene Patterns

Rotating Cube (Hello World)

const geometry = new THREE.BoxGeometry(1, 1, 1);
const material = new THREE.MeshStandardMaterial({ color: 0x00ff88 });
const cube = new THREE.Mesh(geometry, material);
scene.add(cube);

renderer.setAnimationLoop((time) => {
    cube.rotation.x = time * 0.001;
    cube.rotation.y = time * 0.001;
    renderer.render(scene, camera);
});

Floating Particle Field

const particleCount = 1000;
const geometry = new THREE.BufferGeometry();
const positions = new Float32Array(particleCount * 3);

for (let i = 0; i < particleCount * 3; i += 3) {
    positions[i] = (Math.random() - 0.5) * 50;
    positions[i + 1] = (Math.random() - 0.5) * 50;
    positions[i + 2] = (Math.random() - 0.5) * 50;
}

geometry.setAttribute('position', new THREE.BufferAttribute(positions, 3));
const material = new THREE.PointsMaterial({ color: 0xffffff, size: 0.1 });
const particles = new THREE.Points(geometry, material);
scene.add(particles);

Animated Background with Foreground Object

// Background grid
const gridHelper = new THREE.GridHelper(50, 50, 0x444444, 0x222222);
scene.add(gridHelper);

// Foreground object
const mainGeometry = new THREE.IcosahedronGeometry(1, 0);
const mainMaterial = new THREE.MeshStandardMaterial({
    color: 0xff6600,
    flatShading: true
});
const mainMesh = new THREE.Mesh(mainGeometry, mainMaterial);
scene.add(mainMesh);

Colors

Three.js uses hexadecimal color format: 0xRRGGBB

Common hex colors:

  • Black: 0x000000, White: 0xffffff
  • Red: 0xff0000, Green: 0x00ff00, Blue: 0x0000ff
  • Cyan: 0x00ffff, Magenta: 0xff00ff, Yellow: 0xffff00
  • Orange: 0xff8800, Purple: 0x8800ff, Pink: 0xff0088

Anti-Patterns to Avoid

Basic Setup Mistakes

Not importing OrbitControls from correct path Why bad: Controls won't load, THREE.OrbitControls is undefined in modern Three.js Better: Use import { OrbitControls } from 'three/addons/controls/OrbitControls.js' or unpkg examples/jsm path

Forgetting to add object to scene Why bad: Object won't render, silent failure Better: Always call scene.add(object) after creating meshes/lights

Using old requestAnimationFrame pattern instead of setAnimationLoop Why bad: More verbose, doesn't handle XR/WebXR automatically Better: renderer.setAnimationLoop((time) => { ... })

Performance Issues

Creating new geometries in animation loop Why bad: Massive memory allocation, frame rate collapse Better: Create geometry once, reuse it. Transform only position/rotation/scale

Using too many segments on primitives Why bad: Unnecessary vertices, GPU overhead Better: Default segments are usually fine. SphereGeometry(1, 32, 16) not SphereGeometry(1, 128, 64)

Not setting pixelRatio cap Why bad: 4K/5K displays run at full resolution, poor performance Better: Math.min(window.devicePixelRatio, 2)

Code Organization

Everything in one giant function Why bad: Hard to modify, hard to debug Better: Separate setup into functions: createScene(), createLights(), createMeshes()

Hardcoding all values Why bad: Difficult to tweak and experiment Better: Define constants at top: const CONFIG = { color: 0x00ff88, speed: 0.001 }


Variation Guidance

IMPORTANT: Each Three.js app should feel unique and context-appropriate.

Vary by scenario:

  • Portfolio/showcase: Elegant, smooth animations, muted colors
  • Game/interactive: Bright colors, snappy controls, particle effects
  • Data visualization: Clean lines, grid helpers, clear labels
  • Background effect: Subtle, slow movement, dark/gradient backgrounds
  • Product viewer: Realistic lighting, PBR materials, smooth orbit

Vary visual elements:

  • Geometry choice: Not everything needs to be a cube. Explore spheres, tori, icosahedra
  • Material style: Mix flat shaded, glossy, metallic, wireframe
  • Color palettes: Use complementary, analogous, or monochromatic schemes
  • Animation style: Rotation, oscillation, wave motion, mouse tracking

Avoid converging on:

  • Default green cube as first example every time
  • Same camera angle (front-facing, z=5)
  • Identical lighting setup (always directional light at 1,1,1)

Remember

Three.js is a tool for interactive 3D on the web.

Effective Three.js apps:

  • Start with the scene graph mental model
  • Use primitives as building blocks
  • Keep animations simple and performant
  • Vary visual style based on purpose
  • Import from modern ES module paths

Modern Three.js (r150+) uses ES modules from three package or CDN. CommonJS patterns and global THREE variable are legacy.

For advanced topics (GLTF models, shaders, post-processing), see references/advanced-topics.md.

Claude is capable of creating elegant, performant 3D web experiences. These patterns guide the way—they don't limit the result.