
clojure-write
by aiskillstore
Security-audited skills for Claude, Codex & Claude Code. One-click install, quality verified.
SKILL.md
name: clojure-write description: Guide Clojure and ClojureScript development using REPL-driven workflow, coding conventions, and best practices. Use when writing, developing, or refactoring Clojure/ClojureScript code.
Clojure Development Skill
Tool Preference
When clojure-mcp tools are available (e.g., clojure_eval, clojure_edit), always use them
instead of shell commands like ./bin/mage -repl. The MCP tools provide:
- Direct REPL integration without shell escaping issues
- Better error messages and feedback
- Structural Clojure editing that prevents syntax errors
Only fall back to ./bin/mage commands when clojure-mcp is not available.
Autonomous Development Workflow
- Do not attempt to read or edit files outside the project folder
- Add failing tests first, then fix them
- Work autonomously in small, testable increments
- Run targeted tests, and lint continuously during development
- Prioritize understanding existing patterns before implementing
- Don't commit changes, leave it for the user to review and make commits
Metabase Clojure Style Guide
This guide covers Clojure and ClojureScript coding conventions for Metabase. See also: CLOJURE_STYLE_GUIDE.adoc for the Community Clojure Style Guide.
Naming Conventions
General Naming:
- Acceptable abbreviations:
acc,i,pred,coll,n,s,k,f - Use
kebab-casefor all variables, functions, and constants
Function Naming:
- Pure functions should be nouns describing the value they return (e.g.,
agenotcalculate-ageorget-age) - Functions with side effects must end with
! - Don't repeat namespace alias in function names
Destructuring:
- Map destructuring should use kebab-case local bindings even if the map uses
snake_casekeys
Documentation Standards
Docstrings:
- Every public var in
srcorenterprise/backend/srcmust have docstring - Format using Markdown conventions
- Reference other vars with
[[other-var]]not backticks
Comments:
TODOformat:;; TODO (Name M/D/YY) -- description
Code Organization
Visibility:
- Make everything
^:privateunless it is used elsewhere - Try to organize namespaces to avoid
declare(put public functions near the end)
Size and Structure:
- Break up functions > 20 lines
- Lines ≤ 120 characters
- No blank lines within definition forms (except pairwise
let/cond)
Style Conventions
Keywords and Metadata:
- Prefer namespaced keywords for internal use:
:query-type/normalnot:normal - Tag variables with
:arglistsmetadata if they're functions but wouldn't otherwise have it
Tests
Organization:
- Break large tests into separate
deftestforms for logically separate test cases - Test names should end in
-testor-test-<number>
Performance:
- Mark pure function tests
^:parallel
Modules
OSS Modules:
- Follow
metabase.<module>.*pattern - Source in
src/metabase/<module>/
Enterprise Modules:
- Follow
metabase-enterprise.<module>.*pattern - Source in
enterprise/backend/src/metabase_enterprise/<module>/
Module Structure:
- REST API endpoints go in
<module>.apior<module>.api.*namespaces - Put module public API in
<module>.coreusing Potemkin imports - Put Toucan models in
<module>.models.* - Put settings in
<module>.settings - Put schemas in
<module>.schema
Module Linters:
- Do not cheat module linters with
:clj-kondo/ignore [:metabase/modules]
REST API Endpoints
Required Elements:
- All new endpoints must have response schemas (
:- <schema>after route string) - All endpoints need Malli schemas for parameters (detailed and complete)
- All new REST API endpoints MUST HAVE TESTS
Naming Conventions:
- Query parameters use kebab-case
- Request bodies use
snake_case - Routes use singular nouns (e.g.,
/api/dashboard/:id)
Behavior:
GETendpoints should not have side effects (except analytics)defendpointforms should be small wrappers around Toucan model code
MBQL (Metabase Query Language)
Restrictions:
- No raw MBQL introspection outside of
lib,lib-be, orquery-processormodules - Use Lib and MBQL 5 in new source code; avoid legacy MBQL
Database and Models
Naming:
- Model names and table names should be singular nouns
- Application database uses
snake_caseidentifiers
Best Practices:
- Use
t2/select-one-fninstead of fetching entire rows for one column - Put correct behavior in Toucan methods, not separate helper functions
Drivers
Documentation:
- New driver multimethods must be mentioned in
docs/developers-guide/driver-changelog.md
Implementation:
- Driver implementations should pass
driverargument to other driver multimethods - Don't hardcode driver names in implementations
- Minimize logic inside
read-column-thunkin JDBC-based drivers
Miscellaneous
Examples:
- Example data should be bird-themed if possible
Linter Suppressions:
- Use proper format for kondo suppressions
- No
#_:clj-kondo/ignore(keyword form)
Configurable Options:
- Don't define configurable options that can only be set with environment variables
- Use
:internaldefsettinginstead
Linting and Formatting
- Lint PR:
./bin/mage kondo-updated master(or whatever target branch)- Call the command one time at the beginning, record the results, then work through the problems one at a time.
- If the solution is obvious, then please apply the fix. Otherwise skip it.
- If you fix all the issues (and verify by rerunning the kondo-updated command):
- commit the change with a succinct and descriptive commit message
- Lint File:
./bin/mage kondo <file or files>- Use the linter as a way to know that you are adhering to conventions in place in the codebase
- Lint Changes:
./bin/mage kondo-updated HEAD - Format:
./bin/mage cljfmt-files [path]
Testing
- Run a test:
./bin/mage run-tests namespace/test-name - Run all tests in a namespace:
./bin/mage run-tests namespace - Run all tests for a module:
./bin/mage run-tests test/metabase/notificationBecause the module lives in that directory.
Note: the ./bin/mage run-tests command accepts multiple args, so you can pass
./bin/mage run-tests namespace/test-name namespace/other-test namespace/third-test
to run 3 tests, or
./bin/mage run-tests test/metabase/module1 test/metabase/module2 to run 2 modules.
Code Readability
- Check Code Readability:
./bin/mage -check-readable <file> [line-number]- Run after every change to Clojure code
- Check specific line first, then entire file if readable
REPL Usage
Note: If you have
clojure-mcptools available (check for tools likeclojure_eval), always prefer those over./bin/mage -repl. The MCP tools provide better integration, richer feedback, and avoid shell escaping issues. Only use./bin/mage -replas a fallback when clojure-mcp is not available.
- Evaluating Clojure Code:
./bin/mage -repl '<code>'- See "Sending Code to the REPL" section for more details
Sending Code to the REPL
- Send code to the metabase process REPL using:
./bin/mage -repl '(+ 1 1)'where(+ 1 1)is your Clojure code.- See
./bin/mage -repl -hfor more details. - If the Metabase backend is not running, you'll see an error message with instructions on how to start it.
- See
Working with Files and Namespaces
- Load a file and call functions with fully qualified names:
To call your.namespace/your-function on arg1 and arg2:
./bin/mage -repl --namespace your.namespace '(your-function arg1 arg2)'
DO NOT use "require", "load-file" etc in the code string argument.
Understanding the Response
The ./bin/mage -repl command returns three separate, independent outputs:
value: The return value of the last expression (best for data structures)stdout: Any printed output fromprintlnetc. (best for messages)stderr: Any error messages (best for warnings and errors)
Example call:
./bin/mage -repl '(println "Hello, world!") '\''({0 1, 1 3, 2 0, 3 2} {0 2, 1 0, 2 3, 3 1})'
Example response:
ns: user
session: 32a35206-871c-4553-9bc9-f49491173d1c
value: ({0 1, 1 3, 2 0, 3 2} {0 2, 1 0, 2 3, 3 1})
stdout: Hello, world!
stderr:
For effective REPL usage:
- Return data structures as function return values
- Use
printlnfor human-readable messages - Print errors to stderr
REPL-Driven Development Workflow
- Start with small, fundamental functions:
- Identify the core features or functionalities required for your task.
- Break each feature down into the smallest, most basic functions that can be developed and tested independently.
- Write and test in the REPL:
- Write the code for each small function directly in the REPL (Read-Eval-Print Loop).
- Test it thoroughly with a variety of inputs, including typical use cases and relevant edge cases, to ensure it behaves as expected.
- Integrate into source code:
- Once a function works correctly in the REPL, move it from the REPL environment into your source code files (e.g., within appropriate namespaces).
- Gradually increase complexity:
- Build upon tested, basic functions to create more complex functions or components.
- Compose smaller functions together, testing each new composition in the REPL to verify correctness step by step.
- Ensure dependency testing:
- Make sure every function is fully tested in the REPL before it is depended upon by other functions.
- This ensures that each layer of your application is reliable before you build on it.
- Use the REPL fully:
- Use the REPL as your primary tool to experiment with different approaches, iterate quickly, and get immediate feedback on your code.
- Follow functional programming principles:
- Keep functions small, focused, and composable.
- Use Clojure's functional programming features—like immutability, higher-order functions, and the standard library—to write concise, effective code.
How to Evaluate Code
Bottom-up Dev Loop
- Write code into a file.
- Evaluate the file's namespace and make sure it loads correctly with:
./bin/mage -repl --namespace metabase.app-db.connection
- Call functions in the namespace with test inputs, and observe that the outputs are correct
Feel free to copy these REPL session trials into actual test cases using
deftestandis. - Once you know these functions are good, return to 1, and compose them into the task that you need to build.
Critical Rules for Editing
- Be careful with parentheses counts when editing Clojure code
- After EVERY change to Clojure code, verify readability with
-check-readable - End all files with a newline
- When editing tabular code, where the columns line up, try to keep them aligned
- Spaces on a line with nothing after it is not allowed
Score
Total Score
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