| name | react-component-generator |
| description | Generate React components following best practices with TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, and Zustand state management. Use this skill when the user requests creating React components, UI elements, or mentions component generation. Supports common component patterns including basic components, forms, lists, cards, buttons, modals, and stateful components with Zustand integration. |
| allowed-tools | Read, Write, Edit, Glob, Grep |
React Component Generator
This skill provides templates and best practices for generating high-quality React components using TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, and Zustand for state management.
Purpose
Generate production-ready React components that follow industry best practices and maintain consistency across the codebase. The skill includes pre-built templates for common component patterns and comprehensive best practices documentation.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when:
- The user requests creating a new React component
- The user asks for UI elements like forms, buttons, cards, lists, or modals
- The user mentions component generation or scaffolding
- The user needs a component with Zustand state management
- The user wants to follow React best practices
Available Component Templates
The skill provides the following templates in the assets/ directory:
1. BasicComponent.tsx
A simple presentational component template for UI elements without complex state.
When to use:
- Simple UI elements (headers, footers, containers)
- Presentational components that receive data via props
- Reusable layout components
Key features:
- TypeScript interface for props
- JSDoc documentation
- Tailwind CSS styling
- Children support
2. StatefulComponent.tsx
A component with integrated Zustand store for state management.
When to use:
- Components requiring complex local state
- Components with multiple related state values
- Components with state that might be shared across instances
- Components with async operations
Key features:
- Complete Zustand store setup
- State and actions separation
- TypeScript interfaces for store
- Loading state handling
3. FormComponent.tsx
A form component with validation, error handling, and submission logic.
When to use:
- Login/registration forms
- Contact forms
- Data entry forms
- Any form with validation requirements
Key features:
- Built-in validation logic
- Error state management
- Form submission handling
- Accessible form inputs with labels
- Loading state during submission
4. ListComponent.tsx
A reusable list component for displaying collections of items.
When to use:
- Todo lists
- User lists
- Product catalogs
- Any itemized data display
Key features:
- Generic item type support
- Item click handlers
- Delete functionality
- Empty state handling
- Responsive design
5. CardComponent.tsx
A flexible card component for content display.
When to use:
- Product cards
- User profile cards
- Content previews
- Dashboard widgets
Key features:
- Optional image section
- Header and footer sections
- Click handling
- Flexible content area
6. ButtonComponent.tsx
A versatile button component with multiple variants and states.
When to use:
- Any button needs in the application
- Call-to-action buttons
- Form submission buttons
- Action buttons
Key features:
- Multiple variants (primary, secondary, danger, success, outline)
- Multiple sizes (sm, md, lg)
- Loading state with spinner
- Disabled state
- Full-width option
7. ModalComponent.tsx
A modal/dialog component with backdrop and accessibility features.
When to use:
- Confirmation dialogs
- Content detail views
- Settings panels
- Any overlay UI
Key features:
- ESC key handling
- Backdrop click to close
- Body scroll prevention
- Multiple sizes
- Accessible markup
How to Use Templates
When generating a component:
Identify the component type - Determine which template best fits the user's requirements.
Read the appropriate template - Load the template file from the
assets/directory:Read assets/BasicComponent.tsxCustomize the template - Replace placeholder names and add specific functionality:
- Replace
ComponentNamewith the actual component name (PascalCase) - Update the interface name from
ComponentNamePropsto match - If using Zustand, update
useComponentNameStoreto match - Modify props to match requirements
- Adjust Tailwind classes for styling
- Add or remove features as needed
- Replace
Follow naming conventions - Refer to
references/best-practices.mdfor:- Component naming (PascalCase)
- Props interface naming (ComponentName + "Props")
- Store naming (use + ComponentName + "Store")
- File organization
Apply best practices - Consult
references/best-practices.mdfor guidance on:- TypeScript patterns
- Zustand store structure
- Tailwind CSS class organization
- Accessibility requirements
- Performance optimization
- Error handling
Component Naming Guidelines
Apply these naming rules when generating components:
Component name: Use PascalCase based on the user's description
- "login form" →
LoginForm - "user profile card" →
UserProfileCard - "data table" →
DataTable
- "login form" →
Props interface: ComponentName + "Props"
LoginForm→LoginFormPropsUserProfileCard→UserProfileCardProps
Zustand store: "use" + ComponentName + "Store"
LoginForm→useLoginFormStoreDataTable→useDataTableStore
File name: Match the component name exactly
LoginForm→LoginForm.tsxUserProfileCard→UserProfileCard.tsx
Best Practices Reference
For detailed guidance, consult references/best-practices.md which covers:
- Component structure and file organization
- TypeScript best practices
- Zustand state management patterns
- Tailwind CSS organization and responsive design
- Component composition patterns
- Event handler naming
- Performance optimization (memoization, lazy loading)
- Accessibility (semantic HTML, ARIA, keyboard navigation)
- Error handling and boundaries
- Testing considerations
Example Workflow
User request: "Create a user login form component"
Steps:
- Identify that this requires a form component
- Read
assets/FormComponent.tsxtemplate - Customize for login use case:
- Rename to
LoginForm - Update
LoginFormPropsinterface - Modify form fields (username/email, password)
- Add appropriate validation
- Update styling with Tailwind classes
- Rename to
- Place in appropriate directory (e.g.,
components/auth/LoginForm.tsx) - Verify accessibility and best practices
User request: "Create a product card with image and price"
Steps:
- Identify that this requires a card component
- Read
assets/CardComponent.tsxtemplate - Customize for product use case:
- Rename to
ProductCard - Update
ProductCardPropsto include price, product details - Adjust image section for product photos
- Add price display in content or footer
- Style with Tailwind for product display
- Rename to
- Place in
components/products/ProductCard.tsx
User request: "Create a todo list with Zustand"
Steps:
- Identify that this requires a stateful list component
- Read both
assets/StatefulComponent.tsxandassets/ListComponent.tsx - Combine patterns:
- Create Zustand store for todo state management
- Use list display pattern for rendering todos
- Add todo-specific actions (add, toggle, delete)
- Integrate form for adding new todos
- Name as
TodoListwithuseTodoListStore - Place in
components/todos/TodoList.tsx
Notes
- Always use TypeScript with proper type definitions
- Follow Tailwind's mobile-first responsive design approach
- Include proper JSDoc comments for better IDE support
- Ensure components are accessible (ARIA labels, keyboard navigation)
- Consider performance (memoization for expensive operations)
- Keep components focused and composable
- Export both named and default exports for flexibility