| name | views-filters |
| description | .object.yaml format and template, view type settings (kanban, calendar, timeline, gallery, list), saved views with filter operators, and date format rules. |
| metadata | {"openclaw":{"inject":true,"always":true,"emoji":"👁️"}} |
CRM Views & Filters
This skill covers .object.yaml format, view types, saved views, and filter operators. For workspace fundamentals, see the parent crm skill (crm/SKILL.md). For creating objects end-to-end, see object-builder (crm/object-builder/SKILL.md).
.object.yaml Format
Every object directory MUST contain a .object.yaml file. This is a lightweight metadata projection that the sidebar reads. Generate it from DuckDB after creating or modifying any object.
Template:
id: "<object_id from DuckDB>"
name: "<object_name>"
description: "<object_description>"
icon: "<lucide_icon_name>"
default_view: "<table|kanban|calendar|timeline|gallery|list>"
entry_count: <number>
fields:
- name: "Full Name"
type: text
required: true
- name: "Email Address"
type: email
required: true
- name: "Website"
type: url
- name: "Status"
type: enum
values: ["New", "Contacted", "Qualified", "Converted"]
- name: "Company"
type: relation
related_object: company
relationship_type: many_to_one
- name: "Assigned To"
type: user
- name: "Actions"
type: action
action_config:
actions:
- id: act_mark_done
label: "Mark Done"
variant: success
scriptPath: ".actions/mark-done.sh"
Action fields include action_config (not values or required). The action_config mirrors the JSON stored in the field's default_value in DuckDB. See the actions skill for details.
View Type Settings
.object.yaml supports a view_settings block for configuring how each view type renders. These settings serve as defaults; individual saved views can override them.
view_settings:
kanbanField: "Status"
calendarDateField: "Due Date"
calendarEndDateField: "End Date"
calendarMode: "month"
timelineStartField: "Start Date"
timelineEndField: "End Date"
timelineGroupField: "Status"
timelineZoom: "week"
galleryTitleField: "Name"
galleryCoverField: "Image"
listTitleField: "Name"
listSubtitleField: "Description"
column_widths:
Full Name: 250
Email Address: 200
Status: 150
If an object has no custom date field, you MUST fall back to system timestamps:
created_at (always available on entries)
updated_at (always available on entries)
These can be used in calendarDateField, timelineStartField, timelineEndField, filters, sorts, and date-based user requests.
View types:
| View Type | Best for | Required settings |
|---|
table | Spreadsheet-like data editing | None (default) |
kanban | Status-based boards | kanbanField (enum) |
calendar | Date-based entries | calendarDateField (date) |
timeline | Gantt charts / project planning | timelineStartField (date) |
gallery | Visual card grid | None (auto-detects title) |
list | Simple compact list | None (auto-detects title) |
When creating objects with specific use cases, set default_view and view_settings appropriately:
- Task boards:
default_view: "kanban" + view_settings.kanbanField: "Status"
- Event calendars:
default_view: "calendar" + view_settings.calendarDateField: "Date"
- Project timelines:
default_view: "timeline" + view_settings.timelineStartField: "Start Date" + view_settings.timelineEndField: "End Date"
Saved Views and Filters
.object.yaml supports a views section for saved filter views. These views appear in the UI filter bar and can be created or modified by the agent to immediately change what the user sees (the UI live-reloads via the file watcher).
Default behavior:
- When the user asks to filter, narrow, segment, show only, or hide entries in the UI, create or update a saved view and set
active_view even if they did not explicitly ask to "create a view".
- For table views,
columns is optional. Omit it by default. If columns is absent, the UI shows the default/all columns for that view.
views[].columns controls visibility only, not display order.
- Only include
columns when the user explicitly asks for a specific visible subset of columns.
- If the user asks to reorder columns, update the object's field
sort_order in DuckDB and regenerate the top-level .object.yaml fields list in the same order.
Filter Operators by Field Type
| Field Type | Operators |
|---|
| text/richtext/email | contains, not_contains, equals, not_equals, starts_with, ends_with, is_empty, is_not_empty |
| number | eq, neq, gt, gte, lt, lte, between, is_empty, is_not_empty |
| date | on, before, after, date_between, relative_past, relative_next, is_empty, is_not_empty |
| enum | is, is_not, is_any_of, is_none_of, is_empty, is_not_empty |
| boolean | is_true, is_false, is_empty, is_not_empty |
| relation/user | has_any, has_none, has_all, is_empty, is_not_empty |
| tags | contains, not_contains, is_empty, is_not_empty |
System timestamp columns are always available on every object entry:
created_at (date/time)
updated_at (date/time)
Treat them as date fields for filtering, sorting, calendar, and timeline operations even when fields has no date type columns.
Views Template
Append to .object.yaml:
IMPORTANT: The field value in filter rules must match the exact field name (case-sensitive) as it appears in the fields list, or use system column names (created_at, updated_at).
views:
- name: "Active deals"
view_type: "table"
filters:
id: root
conjunction: and
rules:
- id: f1
field: "Status"
operator: is_any_of
value:
- "Negotiating"
- "Proposal sent"
- id: f2
field: "Amount"
operator: gte
value: 10000
sort:
- field: updated_at
direction: desc
- name: "Board"
view_type: "kanban"
settings:
kanbanField: "Status"
- name: "Calendar"
view_type: "calendar"
settings:
calendarDateField: "Due Date"
calendarMode: "month"
- name: "Timeline"
view_type: "timeline"
settings:
timelineStartField: "Start Date"
timelineEndField: "End Date"
timelineGroupField: "Status"
timelineZoom: "week"
- name: "Overdue"
view_type: "table"
filters:
id: root
conjunction: and
rules:
- id: f1
field: "Due Date"
operator: before
value: today
- id: f2
field: "Status"
operator: is_not
value: Done
active_view: "Active deals"
Each saved view can specify:
view_type: table | kanban | calendar | timeline | gallery | list (defaults to object's default_view)
settings: per-view-type configuration (overrides object-level view_settings)
filters: standard filter rules
sort: sort rules
columns: optional visible column names for table view. Omit by default; if absent, the table shows the default/all columns. This controls visibility only, not order. Only set this when the user explicitly requests specific columns.
column_widths: optional map of field name to pixel width. Set when the user explicitly asks for specific column sizes. The UI also auto-persists widths when columns are drag-resized.
When a user asks for date-based operations (e.g. move from one date to another) and no custom date fields exist, default to created_at unless the user explicitly asks for updated_at.
Date Format
All date filter values MUST use ISO 8601 YYYY-MM-DD strings (e.g. "2026-03-01"). The special value today is also supported for on, before, and after operators.
Date Range Filter (date_between)
- id: f1
field: Due Date
operator: date_between
value:
- "2026-03-01"
- "2026-03-31"
Relative Date Filters (e.g. "in the last 7 days")
- id: f1
field: created_at
operator: relative_past
relativeAmount: 7
relativeUnit: days
OR Groups (match any rule)
filters:
id: root
conjunction: or
rules:
- id: f1
field: "Status"
operator: is
value: "Active"
- id: f2
field: "Priority"
operator: is
value: "High"
Generating .object.yaml from DuckDB
When the user asks to filter/show/hide entries by natural language, treat that as a request to create or update a saved view unless they clearly want a one-off analysis only. Write the .object.yaml with the appropriate views and set active_view. Do not add columns unless the user explicitly asks for specific visible columns. If they ask to reorder columns, handle that separately by updating field sort_order and regenerating the top-level fields projection. The web UI will pick up the change instantly via SSE file watcher. Every rule needs a unique id (short alphanumeric string). The root filter group also needs id: root.
Generate by querying DuckDB then writing the file:
duckdb {{WORKSPACE_PATH}}/workspace.duckdb -json "
SELECT o.id, o.name, o.description, o.default_view,
(SELECT COUNT(*) FROM entries WHERE object_id = o.id) as entry_count
FROM objects o WHERE o.name = 'lead'
"
duckdb {{WORKSPACE_PATH}}/workspace.duckdb -json "
SELECT name, type, required, enum_values, default_value FROM fields
WHERE object_id = (SELECT id FROM objects WHERE name = 'lead')
ORDER BY sort_order
"
OBJ_ID=$(duckdb {{WORKSPACE_PATH}}/workspace.duckdb -noheader -list "SELECT id FROM objects WHERE name = 'lead'")
ENTRY_COUNT=$(duckdb {{WORKSPACE_PATH}}/workspace.duckdb -noheader -list "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM entries WHERE object_id = '$OBJ_ID'")
mkdir -p {{WORKSPACE_PATH}}/lead
cat > {{WORKSPACE_PATH}}/lead/.object.yaml << EOF
id: "$OBJ_ID"
name: "lead"
description: "Sales leads tracking"
icon: "user-plus"
default_view: "table"
entry_count: $ENTRY_COUNT
fields:
- name: "Full Name"
type: text
required: true
- name: "Email Address"
type: email
required: true
- name: "Status"
type: enum
values: ["New", "Contacted", "Qualified", "Converted"]
- name: "Score"
type: number
- name: "Notes"
type: richtext
EOF