| disable-model-invocation | false |
| name | effect-ts |
| user-invocable | true |
| description | Use for nontrivial Effect-TS work including services/layers, typed errors, Schema/JSONSchema, Config, runtime/concurrency, @effect/vitest, @effect/ai, @effect/sql, or @prb/effect-next. |
Effect-TS Expert
Expert guidance for functional programming with the Effect library, covering error handling, dependency injection,
composability, testing, and runtime-boundary patterns.
Fast Path
Use this skill for nontrivial Effect work. Do not route through this skill just because a file imports from effect; use
it when the change depends on Effect semantics such as services, layers, typed errors, Schema, Config, runtime/concurrency,
streams, or Effect-aware tests.
For small code edits:
- Inspect local project patterns first.
- Read
./references/critical-rules.md before writing or changing Effect code.
- Open only the reference files that match the task.
- Run the narrowest project check that proves the changed Effect behavior.
Upstream Source Check
Check the Effect source at ~/.effect only when the task needs upstream API details, changelog verification, or a complex
type/runtime question that local project patterns do not answer.
If ~/.effect is required but missing, stop and inform the user. Clone it before proceeding:
git clone https://github.com/Effect-TS/effect.git ~/.effect
Upstream Baseline
Last checked against ~/.effect HEAD 05d72eab7 from 2026-06-05:
effect@3.21.3
@effect/ai@0.36.0
@effect/ai-openai@0.40.0
@effect/platform@0.96.1
@effect/sql@0.51.1
@effect/rpc@0.75.1
@effect/cluster@0.59.0
Your local ~/.effect checkout need not match these exact versions. Drift is expected and fine as long as the major
versions match. For effect that means the 3.x line. For the 0.x @effect/* packages, semver treats the leading
non-zero segment as the break boundary, so match the minor too (e.g. @effect/ai@0.36.x). Patch differences, and minor
differences on stable packages, won't invalidate this skill's guidance; only a break-boundary bump warrants caution.
Local ~/.effect drift is usually fine for routine project work. If git -C ~/.effect log -1 --oneline is newer and the
task depends on upstream behavior, inspect the touched package changelogs and commits before relying on this skill.
Capture public API or guidance changes in a reference file.
Research Strategy
Effect-TS has many ways to accomplish the same task. For moderate to high complexity tasks, research enough to choose the
least surprising pattern that fits the current codebase. Prefer parallel local reads/searches. Use subagents only when the
environment explicitly supports them and the task has separable research tracks.
Research Sources (Priority Order)
-
Codebase Patterns First — Examine similar patterns in the current project before implementing. If Effect patterns
exist in the codebase, follow them for consistency. If no patterns exist, skip this step.
-
Effect Source Code — For complex type errors, unclear behavior, or implementation details, examine the relevant
package source under ~/.effect/packages/<package>/src/. For core Effect, use ~/.effect/packages/effect/src/.
-
Package Changelogs — When behavior changed recently, read the relevant changelog under ~/.effect/packages/*/
before inferring from old examples.
When to Research
HIGH Priority (Always Research):
- Implementing Services, Layers, or complex dependency injection
- Error handling with multiple error types or complex error hierarchies
- Stream-based operations and reactive patterns
- Resource management with scoped effects and cleanup
- Concurrent/parallel operations and performance-critical code
- Testing patterns, especially unfamiliar test scenarios
MEDIUM Priority (Research if Complex):
- Refactoring imperative code (try-catch, promises) to Effect patterns
- Adding new service dependencies or restructuring service layers
- Custom error types or extending existing error hierarchies
- Integrations with external systems (databases, APIs, third-party services)
Research Approach
- Focus on canonical, readable, and maintainable solutions rather than clever optimizations
- Verify suggested approaches against existing codebase patterns for consistency (if patterns exist)
- When multiple approaches are possible, prefer the one already used locally unless it is clearly flawed
Reference Routing
Open references selectively:
| Task shape | Read |
|---|
| Writing/changing Effect code | ./references/critical-rules.md |
Services, Layers, Effect.Service, Context.Tag, Effect.fn | ./references/services-layers.md |
| Config, env vars, secrets, custom providers | ./references/config.md |
| Schema decoding, JSON Schema, AI parameter shapes | ./references/schema-jsonschema.md |
@effect/vitest, TestClock, sleeps/retries, fibers in tests | ./references/testing.md |
Resources, scheduling, refs, concurrency, SubscriptionRef | ./references/runtime.md |
| Streams, backpressure, bounded consumption | ./references/streams.md |
Pattern matching, tagged unions, Data.taggedEnum | ./references/pattern-matching.md |
@effect/ai tools/providers/OpenAI integration | ./references/ai.md |
@effect/sql, SqlSchema, repository row decoding | ./references/sql.md |
@effect/platform, @effect/rpc, deployment runtimes | ./references/platform-rpc.md |
@prb/effect-next / Next.js App Router | ./references/next-js.md |
@effect-atom/* React state | ./references/effect-atom.md |
| Array/Record reducers, filters, predicates, sorting | ./references/collection-operations.md |
| Tiny utility functions, deprecations | ./references/quick-utils.md |
| Upstream drift or recent package behavior | ./references/recent-upstream.md |
Codebase Pattern Discovery
When working in a project that uses Effect, check for existing patterns before implementing new code:
- Search for Effect imports — Look for files importing from
'effect' to understand existing usage
- Identify service patterns — Find how Services and Layers are structured in the project
- Note error handling conventions — Check how errors are defined and propagated
- Examine test patterns — Look at how Effect code is tested in the project
If no Effect patterns exist in the codebase, proceed using canonical patterns from the Effect source and examples.
Do not block on missing codebase patterns.
Effect Principles
Apply these core principles when writing Effect code:
Error Handling
- Use Effect's typed error system instead of throwing exceptions
- Prefer
Schema.TaggedError for domain/API errors that cross serialization or HTTP boundaries
- Use
Data.TaggedError for internal, non-encoded errors when Schema integration is unnecessary
- Use
Effect.fail, Effect.catchTag, Effect.catchAll for error control flow
- See
./references/critical-rules.md for forbidden patterns
Dependency Injection
- Implement dependency injection using Services and Layers
- Define services with
Context.Tag
- Compose layers with
Layer.merge, Layer.provide
- Use
Effect.provide to inject dependencies
Composability
- Leverage Effect's composability for complex operations
- Use appropriate constructors:
Effect.succeed, Effect.fail, Effect.tryPromise, Effect.try
- Apply proper resource management with scoped effects
- Chain operations with
Effect.flatMap, Effect.map, Effect.tap
Code Quality
- Write type-safe code that leverages Effect's type system
- Prefer
Schema.Class for domain and API models that need construction, validation, encoding, or equality
- Use
Effect.gen for readable sequential code
- Implement proper testing patterns using Effect's testing utilities
- Prefer
Effect.fn() for automatic telemetry and better stack traces
Boundary Refactors
- Use Effect services at IO/runtime boundaries where dependency injection, testability, or resource safety improves the
design.
- Do not make pure helpers, module constants, path strings, or tiny build-time utilities effectful just to replace Node or
platform APIs.
@effect/platform services such as FileSystem and Path are environment requirements. Keep them inside existing
service/runtime boundaries unless widening a function's environment is a deliberate design improvement.
- Preserve local domain facades when they already centralize Effect services, for example filesystem, reporter, logger, or
config services.
Critical Rules
Read ./references/critical-rules.md before writing or changing nontrivial Effect code. Key guidelines:
- INEFFECTIVE: try-catch in Effect.gen (Effect failures aren't thrown)
- AVOID: Type assertions (as never/any/unknown)
- RECOMMENDED:
return yield* pattern for errors (makes termination explicit)
Common Failure Modes
Quick links to patterns that frequently cause issues:
- SubscriptionRef version mismatch —
unsafeMake is not a function → runtime.md
- Cancellation vs Failure — Interrupts aren't errors → Error Taxonomy
- Option vs null — Use Option internally, null at boundaries → option-null.md
- Stream backpressure — Infinite streams hang → streams.md
- JSON Schema closed records —
Schema.Record(String, Never) emits no extra properties →
schema-jsonschema.md
- No-parameter AI tools — Use
Tool.EmptyParams or omit parameters → ai.md
- Layer reuse surprises — Layers memoize by object identity; use
Layer.fresh only when needed →
services-layers.md
Explaining Solutions
When providing solutions, explain the Effect-TS concepts being used and why they're appropriate for the specific use
case. If encountering patterns not covered in the documentation, suggest improvements while maintaining consistency with
existing codebase patterns (when they exist).
Quick Reference
Creating Effects
Effect.succeed(value)
Effect.fail(error)
Effect.tryPromise(fn)
Effect.try(fn)
Effect.sync(fn)
Composing Effects
Effect.flatMap(effect, fn)
Effect.map(effect, fn)
Effect.tap(effect, fn)
Effect.all([...effects])
Effect.forEach(items, fn)
Effect.all([e1, e2, e3], { mode: "validate" })
Effect.partition([e1, e2, e3])
Error Handling
class UserNotFoundError extends Schema.TaggedError<UserNotFoundError>()(
"UserNotFoundError",
{
userId: Schema.String
}
) {
get message() {
return `User not found: ${this.userId}`
}
}
class CacheMissError extends Data.TaggedError("CacheMissError")<{
userId: string
}> {}
Effect.gen(function* () {
if (!user) {
return yield* new UserNotFoundError({ userId })
}
})
Effect.catchTag(effect, tag, fn)
Effect.catchAll(effect, fn)
Effect.result(effect)
Effect.orElse(effect, alt)
Error Taxonomy
Categorize errors for appropriate handling:
| Category | Examples | Handling |
|---|
| Expected Rejections | User cancel, deny | Graceful exit, no retry |
| Domain Errors | Validation, business rules | Show to user, don't retry |
| Defects | Bugs, assertions | Log + alert, investigate |
| Interruptions | Fiber cancel, timeout | Cleanup, may retry |
| Unknown/Foreign | Thrown exceptions | Normalize at boundary |
const safeBoundary = Effect.catchAllDefect(effect, (defect) =>
Effect.fail(new UnknownError({ cause: defect }))
)
Effect.catchTag(effect, "UserCancelledError", () => Effect.succeed(null))
Effect.onInterrupt(effect, () => Effect.log("Operation cancelled"))
Pattern Matching (Match Module)
When you need to use Effect's Match module for pattern matching, see references/pattern-matching.md.
Schema and JSON Schema
For schema decoding, JSON Schema generation, closed object shapes, and Schema.Record({ key: Schema.String, value: Schema.Never }), see references/schema-jsonschema.md.
AI Tooling
For @effect/ai tool definitions, empty tool parameters, OpenAI strict schema behavior, and prompt cache enum gotchas,
see references/ai.md.
Services and Layers / Generator Pattern
For service definition patterns (Context.Tag, Effect.Service, Context.Reference, Context.ReadonlyTag) and the generator pattern (Effect.gen, Effect.fn), see references/services-layers.md.
Runtime Patterns (Resource Management, Duration, Scheduling, State, SubscriptionRef, Concurrency)
For resource lifecycles, durations, scheduling, state management, reactive refs, and concurrency primitives, see references/runtime.md.
Configuration & Environment Variables
When you need to read configuration with Config, handle secrets via Redacted, or wire custom config providers, see references/config.md.
Collection Operations (Array, Record, Order)
For Effect's Array/Record reducers, filters, predicates, object traversal replacements, and Order sorting helpers,
see references/collection-operations.md.
Quick Utilities (Functions, Deprecations)
For small utility functions like constVoid and the running list of deprecations, see references/quick-utils.md.
Platform and RPC
For HttpLayerRouter, RpcSerialization.makeMsgPack, and deployment gotchas such as Cloudflare Workers msgpack support,
see references/platform-rpc.md.
Additional Resources
Local Effect Resources
~/.effect/packages/effect/src/ — Core Effect modules and implementation
External Resources
Reference Files
./references/ai.md — @effect/ai tools, Tool.EmptyParams, OpenAI provider notes
./references/config.md — Config, Redacted, and custom config providers
./references/collection-operations.md — Array/Record reducers, filters, predicates, sorting
./references/critical-rules.md — Forbidden patterns and mandatory conventions
./references/effect-atom.md — Effect-Atom reactive state management for React
./references/next-js.md — Effect + Next.js 15+ App Router integration patterns
./references/option-null.md — Option vs null boundary patterns
./references/pattern-matching.md — Match module for tagged unions and conditionals
./references/platform-rpc.md — @effect/platform and @effect/rpc integration notes
./references/quick-utils.md — Utility helpers and deprecations
./references/recent-upstream.md — Recent upstream public changes reflected by this skill
./references/runtime.md — Resource management, Duration, Scheduling, State, SubscriptionRef, Concurrency
./references/schema-jsonschema.md — Schema decoding and JSON Schema generation patterns
./references/services-layers.md — Services, Layers, generator (Effect.gen / Effect.fn)
./references/sql.md — @effect/sql, SqlSchema, row decoding, repository patterns
./references/streams.md — Stream patterns and backpressure gotchas
./references/testing.md — Vitest deterministic testing patterns