
preview-screens
✓ Official★ 413by microsoft · part of microsoft/power-platform-skills
Use when the user wants to preview generated screens in a browser without starting Metro / a simulator — for example after /create-mobile-app finishes or after /edit-app regenerates a screen.
This is the playbook your agent receives when the skill activates — you don't need to read it to use the skill, but it's here to audit before installing.
Shared instructions: shared-instructions.md — read first.
Preview Screens
Generates a self-contained HTML file that renders every screen in the app as a phone-frame mockup (375 × 812) with tab navigation and a dark/light toggle. The agent reads TSX files, understands the Tamagui component tree, and produces equivalent HTML/CSS — no programmatic TSX parsing.
When to use
- After generating screens, to see a quick visual preview without running Metro/Expo
- To share a screenshot-ready mockup with stakeholders
- To verify layout before deploying
When NOT to use
- To run the actual app → use
npx expo start - To modify screens → use
/edit-app;screen-builderis an internal agent invoked by orchestrator skills
Workflow
- Locate project → 2. Discover screens → 3. Read reference mapping → 4. Read & convert each screen → 5. Assemble preview.html → 6. Write file → 7. Open in browser
Step 1 — Locate project
Determine the working directory:
- If
$ARGUMENTScontains--working-dir <path>, use that. - Otherwise use the current working directory.
Validate the project:
Glob pattern="power.config.json" path="<working_dir>"If missing, check for package.json. If neither exists, report the error and stop.
Read memory-bank.md if present to get the project name for the page title:
Grep pattern="^# " path="<working_dir>/memory-bank.md"Fallback: read name from package.json.
Step 2 — Discover screens
Find all TSX files under the app directory:
Glob pattern="app/**/*.tsx" path="<working_dir>"Exclude these patterns — they are not screens:
_layout.tsx(navigation layouts)+not-found.tsx(Expo Router error boundary)- Files in directories starting with
. index.tsxat the app root if it only contains an auth redirect (read it to check)
Derive screen names from file paths:
app/(app)/home.tsx→ "Home"app/(app)/recipes/index.tsx→ "Recipes"app/(app)/recipes/[id].tsx→ "Recipe Detail"app/login.tsx→ "Login"app/oauth-callback.tsx→ skip (not a visible screen)
If native-app-plan.md exists in the working directory, read its ## Screens section for human-friendly labels.
Build an ordered list: [ { path, screenName, screenId } ].
Default tab ordering — Home first, then two details, then the rest. Step 5 marks the first entry as active, so the order below directly controls which screen the user lands on when preview.html opens.
Sort the list with this priority:
- Home / dashboard first. The first screen matching any of these paths (in this priority):
app/(app)/home.tsx,app/(app)/index.tsx,app/(app)/dashboard.tsx,app/index.tsx(only if it's a real home screen — not the auth redirect you already filtered out in Step 2). Ifnative-app-plan.mdflags one screen as the home/landing screen, prefer that. - Then up to two detail screens. A "detail" screen is any TSX whose route segment uses a dynamic param — file path contains
[and](e.g.app/(app)/recipes/[id].tsx,app/(app)/orders/[orderId]/edit.tsx). Take the first two in the order they were discovered (alphabetical by path is fine). - Then everything else in discovery order.
If there are fewer than two detail screens, just include whatever exists and continue with the rest — do not pad with non-detail screens to force a count of 3.
Do not drop any screens — this rule only reorders. Every discovered screen still gets a tab.
Step 3 — Read reference mapping
Load the Tamagui-to-HTML mapping reference:
Read file_path="${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/../../shared/references/tamagui-html-mapping.md"Internalize:
- Component → HTML element + CSS mappings (Section 1)
- Token → pixel values for spacing, font-size, color (Section 2)
- Conversion guidelines — placeholder rules, icon substitutions, what to skip (Section 3)
- Phone frame HTML template (Section 4) — this is the outer shell
Also check if the project has custom brand tokens:
Glob pattern="tamagui.config.ts" path="<working_dir>"If found, read it and extract any custom color tokens (look for tokens: { color: { ... } }). Add them as additional CSS custom properties in the generated HTML.
Step 4 — Read and convert each screen
Print before starting:
"→ Reading + converting screens to HTML/CSS (one print per screen as I go)."
For each screen in the ordered list from Step 2:
-
Read the full TSX file.
-
Identify the component tree. Walk the JSX return statement and note every Tamagui component, its props, and its children.
-
Generate equivalent HTML/CSS using the mapping from Step 3:
YStack→<div style="display:flex; flex-direction:column; ...">- Map every shorthand prop to its CSS equivalent (
f={1}→flex:1,bg="$color2"→background:var(--color2), etc.) - Map token values to pixels (
p="$4"→padding:16px) - Replace
<Ionicons name="..." />icons with Unicode equivalents (see mapping reference Section 3, Guideline 4 — the icon substitution table uses Ionicons names)
-
Handle dynamic content:
.map()over arrays → generate 3–4 representative placeholder itemsuseQuery/useMutation→ show the populated state only (skip loading/error branches)- Form
defaultValues→ pre-fill inputs with those values
Native PDF/pen controls need honest static approximations:
- PDF viewer actions → render a compact report/PDF block with a filename, generated timestamp, storage label (for example
Stored in Evidence PDF FileorOn-device share only), and a disabledView PDFbutton. If the source URL is not visibly HTTPS, label itPreview unavailable in browserrather than showing a fake viewer. - Generated PDF reports → render the generated/ready state and any persistence label from the plan or code, such as
Uploads to Evidence PDF File. Do not embed a browser PDF iframe or imply the native viewer runs in preview. - Pen/signature input → render a signature pad placeholder with an ink stroke sample and a captured-preview state. Include the persistence label when known, such as
Stored in Signature ImageorUploads to Signature File. - Do not wire browser click handlers that pretend to capture pen input, open native PDF viewer, share, print, or upload. This preview is visual only.
-
Produce a
<div class="screen" id="screen-{screenId}">wrapping the converted HTML.
Use inline styles on elements. Keep each screen's HTML self-contained (no shared CSS classes between screens, except the theme variables).
Step 5 — Assemble preview.html
Use the phone frame template from the mapping reference (Section 4) as the outer shell.
Replace the placeholders:
{{APP_NAME}}— project name from Step 1{{TABS}}— one<button class="tab" ...>per screen, first tab gets classactive{{SCREENS}}— all screen<div>blocks from Step 4, first screen gets classactive
If the project has custom brand tokens (from Step 3), add them to the :root CSS block.
Step 6 — Write the file
Write file_path="<working_dir>/preview.html"Print confirmation:
✅ Preview generated: <working_dir>/preview.html
Screens: <N> (<comma-separated list of screen names>)
Toggle: dark/light mode button in top-rightStep 7 — Open in browser
Do NOT prompt. The visual_companion flag in <working_dir>/memory-bank.md already encodes the answer; asking again is redundant. The flag is set by /design-system (Step 6.75) during project creation, or defaults to yes if /design-system was not run.
Read the flag and act:
grep -E "^visual_companion:[[:space:]]*(yes|no)" "<working_dir>/memory-bank.md" 2>/dev/null| Flag | Action |
|---|---|
visual_companion: no | Print the link and stop. Do not auto-open. |
visual_companion: yes (or missing memory-bank, or standalone invocation) | Print the link, then auto-open. |
visual_companion: no — print:
"Preview is at:
file://<working_dir>/preview.html(Visual Companion off — open manually.)"
Otherwise — print the link AND auto-open in one breath, no prompt:
"Preview is at:
file://<working_dir>/preview.html— opening now."
Then try OS-appropriate openers in sequence and fall back to printing the link if none work:
open "<working_dir>/preview.html" 2>/dev/null \
|| xdg-open "<working_dir>/preview.html" 2>/dev/null \
|| powershell.exe -NoProfile -Command "Start-Process '<working_dir>\preview.html'" 2>/dev/null \
|| echo "Could not auto-open. Open this URL in your browser: file://<working_dir>/preview.html"open is macOS-only; the chain covers Linux (xdg-open) and Windows / WSL (powershell.exe Start-Process). On headless / SSH sessions all three fail silently and the user just opens the link they were already given.
Notes
- Read-only with respect to source code. This skill only creates/overwrites
preview.html— it never modifies TSX files, layouts, configs, or the memory bank. - Static approximation. The preview does not execute React, handle state, or fetch data. Dynamic lists show placeholder items. Interactions (button taps, navigation) are not functional.
- Native capabilities are placeholders. PDF viewer, PDF report, sharing, printing, and pen/signature capture are shown as static states only. Browser preview must not imply native capture/viewer APIs work there.
- Re-running
/preview-screensoverwrites the previouspreview.html. - No memory-bank update needed — previews are ephemeral artifacts.
References
- tamagui-html-mapping.md — component + token mapping + phone frame template
- tamagui-component-recipes.md — copy-paste Tamagui snippets (context for recognizing patterns)
- screen-templates.md — screen archetype layouts
npx skills add https://github.com/microsoft/power-platform-skills --skill preview-screensRun this in your project — your agent picks the skill up automatically.
No common issues documented yet. If you hit a problem, the repository's GitHub Issues page is the best place to look.
Licensed under MIT— you can use, modify, and redistribute it under that license's terms.
View the full license file on GitHub →