| name | warp-ui-guidelines |
| description | Catalog of guidelines for writing UI code in the Warp client. Read whenever doing any UI work in this repo, up front before writing the change, so the relevant guidelines shape the implementation. |
warp-ui-guidelines
This skill is a growing catalog of guidelines for working on Warp's UI code. Each guideline captures a lesson that would otherwise be re-learned through review — typically because an agent or contributor reinvented a component, drifted from the design system, or bypassed a shared abstraction.
How to use this skill:
- Read through the guidelines below once at the start of any UI task, then keep them in mind while implementing. The list is short enough to scan.
- Each guideline is self-contained. Not every one will apply to every task — use judgment. But if a guideline does apply, follow it.
- When in doubt, prefer reusing an existing abstraction over introducing a new one. The Warp UI has accumulated a well-factored set of shared components and themes; new one-offs almost always drift.
New guidelines get added here over time. If you discover a recurring UI mistake that would have been caught by a written rule, add it.
Guideline: Reuse button themes
Button colors come from a shared set of ActionButtonTheme impls in app/src/view_components/action_button.rs (and the parallel Theme impls in crates/ui_components/src/button/themes.rs) — PrimaryTheme, SecondaryTheme, NakedTheme, DangerPrimaryTheme, etc. These encode the design system and keep button colors consistent across the app.
When styling a button, use one of the existing themes unchanged. The shared themes are well-established and vetted; if one looks "wrong" for your use case, the most likely explanation is that you're reaching for the wrong theme, not that the theme is buggy.
Do not modify a shared theme on your own initiative. Changing PrimaryTheme, SecondaryTheme, etc. affects every button in the app, and a tweak that fixes your screen can silently regress others. Only edit a shared theme when the user has explicitly confirmed that the design-system component itself needs to change.
Red flags that you're about to make buttons inconsistent:
- Writing a new
impl ActionButtonTheme for FooPrimaryTheme that delegates to PrimaryTheme and only tweaks one method (usually text_color). Almost always the right move is to use PrimaryTheme directly and accept the result.
- Hard-coding
ColorU::new(...) instead of using appearance.theme() accessors (accent, font_color(bg), foreground, etc.).
- Setting
should_opt_out_of_contrast_adjustment to true to force a specific label color.
- Naming a theme after a feature or view (
FooPrimaryTheme, BarSubmitTheme) rather than a design-system role.
If an existing theme genuinely doesn't fit and you think the shared theme should change, surface that to the user before editing it, rather than either editing it unilaterally or papering over it with a one-off.