chakra-ui-builder

Build responsive, accessible UI components and layouts using Chakra UI v3, install or configure Chakra UI in new and existing projects, and design scalable themes using tokens, semantic tokens, recipes, and slot recipes. Use this skill whenever a user asks to build, create, or generate any UI component, page, form, dashboard, navbar, card, landing section, pricing table, or layout using Chakra UI; wants to add Chakra UI to a project, set up ChakraProvider, run CLI snippets, configure color mode, or fix provider wrapping; or asks about theming — defining brand colors, design tokens, semantic tokens, dark mode values, component recipes, slot recipes, typegen, or ejecting the default theme. Trigger on any Chakra UI building, setup, or theming or charts request, however casually phrased — "add my brand colors", "make a reusable card style", "build a bar chart", "show me a line chart", "make me a login form", "build a sidebar", "add Chakra to my app".

Safety Notice

This listing is imported from skills.sh public index metadata. Review upstream SKILL.md and repository scripts before running.

Copy this and send it to your AI assistant to learn

Install skill "chakra-ui-builder" with this command: npx skills add chakra-ui/chakra-ui/chakra-ui-chakra-ui-chakra-ui-builder

Chakra UI Builder

You are building UI with Chakra UI v3 and helping developers set up Chakra UI in their projects. Your job is to produce clean, accessible, responsive code that fits the project — not generic boilerplate. Read the project context first, then build or set up.


Step 1 — Read the project context

Check package.json if available. Look for:

  • Chakra UI version (use v3 patterns by default; only use v2 if explicitly on v2)
  • Framework: Next.js App Router, Pages Router, Vite, plain React
  • TypeScript or JavaScript
  • Package manager (from lockfile: pnpm-lock.yaml, yarn.lock, bun.lock, package-lock.json)

Also glance at existing components if the user references them, so your code matches the conventions already in use (naming, file structure, import style).

If the requirements are vague or the component is complex enough that choices matter (layout direction, data shape, color palette, number of variants), ask before building rather than generating something that needs to be thrown away.


Project setup

If Chakra UI isn't installed yet, complete setup before building.

Install

# npm
npm install @chakra-ui/react @emotion/react

# pnpm
pnpm add @chakra-ui/react @emotion/react

# yarn
yarn add @chakra-ui/react @emotion/react

# bun
bun add @chakra-ui/react @emotion/react

Generate snippets with the CLI

npx @chakra-ui/cli snippet add

With no arguments this adds the recommended set — provider, toaster, and tooltip — and automatically installs required dependencies (including next-themes). Use --all to add every snippet, or snippet list to browse first.

The CLI detects your framework and writes files to the right place:

FrameworkOutput path
Next.js (with src/)src/components/ui/
Next.js (no src/)components/ui/
Vite / plain Reactsrc/components/ui/
Remixapp/components/ui/

Wire up the Provider

Next.js App Router (app/layout.tsx):

import { Provider } from "@/components/ui/provider"

export default function RootLayout({
  children,
}: {
  children: React.ReactNode
}) {
  return (
    <html lang="en" suppressHydrationWarning>
      <body>
        <Provider>{children}</Provider>
      </body>
    </html>
  )
}

suppressHydrationWarning prevents a mismatch caused by next-themes injecting the color-mode class. Do not add "use client" to layout.tsx — the generated provider file already has it.

Next.js Pages Router (pages/_app.tsx):

import { Provider } from "@/components/ui/provider"

export default function App({ Component, pageProps }) {
  return (
    <Provider>
      <Component {...pageProps} />
    </Provider>
  )
}

Vite (src/main.tsx):

import { Provider } from "./components/ui/provider"

createRoot(document.getElementById("root")!).render(
  <StrictMode>
    <Provider>
      <App />
    </Provider>
  </StrictMode>,
)

Manual Provider (if CLI is unavailable)

If the CLI fails, create components/ui/provider.tsx manually and install next-themes separately:

"use client"
import { ChakraProvider, defaultSystem } from "@chakra-ui/react"
import { ThemeProvider } from "next-themes"

export function Provider({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
  return (
    <ChakraProvider value={defaultSystem}>
      <ThemeProvider attribute="class" disableTransitionOnChange>
        {children}
      </ThemeProvider>
    </ChakraProvider>
  )
}

Common setup issues

  • Unstyled components — app is not wrapped in <Provider>. Check the import path and that Provider wraps the component tree.
  • Hydration mismatch — add suppressHydrationWarning to <html> in App Router.
  • next-themes not found — install it: npm install next-themes (only needed for the manual fallback; the CLI handles it automatically).
  • extendTheme not exported — this is a v2 pattern. Use createSystem in v3.

Step 2 — Choose the right layout primitives

Reach for the right Chakra primitive rather than wrapping everything in Box:

NeedUse
Vertical stack of itemsStack (default) or VStack
Horizontal rowHStack or Flex
CSS GridGrid + GridItem
Equal-column gridSimpleGrid columns={N}
Centered page contentContainer maxW="container.lg"
Full flexbox controlFlex with explicit props
Semantic section/articleBox as="section" / Box as="article"

Avoid deep nesting. If you're three Box levels deep with no semantic reason, flatten it. Prefer gap over margin between siblings.


Step 3 — Use tokens, not raw values

Chakra v3 ships semantic tokens that automatically adapt to light/dark mode. Prefer them over hard-coded palette values — they make the component theme-aware without any extra work.

// Prefer semantic tokens
<Box bg="bg.subtle" color="fg.default" borderColor="border.subtle" />
<Text color="fg.muted" />
<Box shadow="md" rounded="lg" />

// Use colorPalette for interactive components (not colorScheme)
<Button colorPalette="blue">Submit</Button>
<Badge colorPalette="green">Active</Badge>

Use raw palette values (blue.500, gray.100) only when a specific color is intentional and should not shift with color mode.


Step 4 — Responsive styles

Chakra uses mobile-first breakpoints. Use array or object syntax consistently:

// Array: [base, sm, md, lg, xl]
<Box px={[4, 6, 8]} fontSize={["sm", "md", "lg"]} />

// Object: explicit breakpoints
<SimpleGrid columns={{ base: 1, md: 2, lg: 3 }} gap={6} />
<Stack direction={{ base: "column", md: "row" }} gap={4} />

Every layout component should handle at least base (mobile) and md (desktop) breakpoints unless the request is explicitly desktop-only.


Step 5 — Forms

Use Field.Root for all form fields — it wires up label, input, error, and help text correctly:

<Field.Root invalid={!!error} required>
  <Field.Label>Email address</Field.Label>
  <Input type="email" placeholder="you@example.com" />
  <Field.ErrorText>{error}</Field.ErrorText>
  <Field.HelpText>We'll never share your email.</Field.HelpText>
</Field.Root>

For form submission state, use disabled (not isDisabled) on inputs and buttons. Group related fields in a Stack gap={4}.


Step 6 — Accessibility

Chakra's built-in components handle most accessibility automatically — don't override it. The things you do need to provide:

  • Icon-only buttons: always add aria-label
    <IconButton aria-label="Close dialog" icon={<CloseIcon />} />
    
  • Images: always pass meaningful alt text (or alt="" for decorative)
  • Form labels: use Field.Label or ensure htmlFor matches the input id
  • Interactive custom elements: if you build something with onClick on a Box, use as="button" or an actual <button> so keyboard navigation works
  • Semantic headings: use h1h6 hierarchy; don't skip levels
  • Color contrast: don't use light gray text on white backgrounds; rely on semantic tokens which are contrast-tested

Step 7 — Next.js: where to add "use client"

In Next.js App Router, Server Components are the default. Add "use client" only to files that need it — not to entire layouts or pages.

A component needs "use client" when it:

  • Uses React hooks (useState, useEffect, useContext, etc.)
  • Handles browser events (onClick with state, form submission, etc.)
  • Uses browser APIs
// Server Component — no directive needed
export default function ProductCard({ name, price }: Props) {
  return (
    <Box p={4} borderWidth={1} rounded="md">
      <Text fontWeight="bold">{name}</Text>
      <Text color="fg.muted">{price}</Text>
    </Box>
  )
}

// Client Component — needs the directive
;("use client")
export function AddToCartButton({ productId }: { productId: string }) {
  const [added, setAdded] = useState(false)
  return (
    <Button onClick={() => setAdded(true)} colorPalette="blue">
      {added ? "Added!" : "Add to cart"}
    </Button>
  )
}

The goal is to push interactivity to the leaves — keep as much of the tree as Server Components as possible.


Step 8 — When to extract components, use recipes, and customize the theme

Extract a component when the same structure appears more than twice, or when a piece is complex enough that naming it makes the parent clearer.

Suggest a recipe when a component has meaningful style variants that a developer would want to customize. Suggest a slot recipe for components with multiple coordinated parts (card with header/body/footer, stat with label/value/icon, etc.).

For deeper theming work — defining brand color tokens, semantic tokens with dark mode values, full recipe/slot-recipe authoring, typegen, or ejecting the default theme — read references/theming.md before responding. It covers the complete defineConfig / createSystem API with full examples.

For any chart request — bar charts, area charts, line charts, pie/donut charts, BarList, BarSegment, or anything involving @chakra-ui/charts — read references/charts.md before responding. It covers the useChart hook, all three chart types, Recharts integration, color tokens, and complete runnable examples.

When you're unsure which component to use, or the user hasn't specified one, read references/component-decision-tree.md. It covers every Chakra component with guidance on when to choose one over a similar alternative.


Output format

Produce:

  1. Complete, runnable code — correct imports, no placeholders like TODO or ...rest of component
  2. Proper import statements — group Chakra imports, then local imports
  3. Component separation — split into multiple components/files if the component is complex or contains clearly separable parts
  4. Responsive styles — at minimum base and md breakpoints for layout
  5. Brief explanation after the code — 2–4 sentences on the key decisions made (layout approach, accessibility choices, responsive strategy). Skip the explanation if the request was trivial.
// Good import style
import { Box, Button, Field, Stack, Text } from "@chakra-ui/react"
// Then local
import { SomeLocalComponent } from "./SomeLocalComponent"

When to ask first

Build immediately if the request is clear enough to produce something useful. Ask first when:

  • The data shape is unknown and it changes the entire structure (e.g., "build a table" — how many columns? what data?)
  • There are meaningful design choices the user might care about (layout direction, number of columns, color palette)
  • The user references files or existing components you haven't seen

When in doubt, state your assumptions at the top of the response and build — it's faster for the user to redirect from something concrete than from nothing.

Source Transparency

This detail page is rendered from real SKILL.md content. Trust labels are metadata-based hints, not a safety guarantee.

Related Skills

Related by shared tags or category signals.

Web3

stable-layer-sdk

A TypeScript SDK for interacting with Stable Layer on Sui blockchain, supporting minting, burning stablecoins, claiming yield rewards, and querying supply.

Registry SourceRecently Updated
Web3

cetus

Provides TypeScript SDKs for building DeFi apps on Sui with Cetus Protocol components like AMMs, vaults, farms, limit orders, xCETUS token, and aggregation.

Registry SourceRecently Updated
Web3

Stock Analysis 6

Analyze stocks and cryptocurrencies using Yahoo Finance data. Supports portfolio management, watchlists with alerts, dividend analysis, 8-dimension stock scoring, viral trend detection (Hot Scanner), and rumor/early signal detection. Use for stock analysis, portfolio tracking, earnings reactions, crypto monitoring, trending stocks, or finding rumors before they hit mainstream.

Registry SourceRecently Updated
Web3

Autonomous Commerce

Execute real-world e-commerce purchases autonomously with escrow protection and cryptographic proof. Use when: User requests a physical purchase (Amazon, retail), budget is specified, escrow funds are available. Don't use when: Just browsing/researching products, no budget specified, user wants price comparison only (use search instead). Outputs: Order confirmation with proof hash, escrow released on verification.

Registry SourceRecently Updated