Loading...
Loading...
Found 17 Skills
Expert guidance on Swift Concurrency best practices, patterns, and implementation. Use when developers mention: (1) Swift Concurrency, async/await, actors, or tasks, (2) "use Swift Concurrency" or "modern concurrency patterns", (3) migrating to Swift 6, (4) data races or thread safety issues, (5) refactoring closures to async/await, (6) @MainActor, Sendable, or actor isolation, (7) concurrent code architecture or performance optimization, (8) concurrency-related linter warnings (SwiftLint or similar; e.g. async_without_await, Sendable/actor isolation/MainActor lint).
Use when writing async/await code, enabling strict concurrency, fixing Sendable errors, migrating from completion handlers, managing shared state with actors, or using Task/TaskGroup for concurrency.
Expert Swift concurrency decisions: async let vs TaskGroup selection, actor isolation boundaries, @MainActor placement strategies, Sendable conformance judgment calls, and structured vs unstructured task trade-offs. Use when designing concurrent code, debugging data races, or choosing between concurrency patterns. Trigger keywords: async, await, actor, Task, TaskGroup, @MainActor, Sendable, concurrency, data race, isolation, structured concurrency, continuation
Resolve Swift concurrency compiler errors, adopt Swift 6.2 approachable concurrency (SE-0466), and write data-race-safe async code. Use when fixing Sendable conformance errors, actor isolation warnings, or strict concurrency diagnostics; when adopting default MainActor isolation, @concurrent, nonisolated(nonsending), or Task.immediate; when designing actor-based architectures, structured concurrency with TaskGroup, or background work offloading; or when migrating from @preconcurrency to full Swift 6 strict concurrency.
Swift modern concurrency with async/await, Task, Actor, Swift 6 strict mode, Sendable, and structured concurrency patterns.
Swift Concurrency patterns — async/await, actors, tasks, Sendable conformance. Use when writing async/await code, implementing actors, working with structured concurrency, or ensuring data race safety.
Swift concurrency API reference — actors, Sendable, Task/TaskGroup, AsyncStream, continuations, isolation patterns, DispatchQueue-to-actor migration with gotcha tables
Use when writing ANY async code, actors, threads, or seeing ANY concurrency error. Covers Swift 6 concurrency, @MainActor, Sendable, data races, async/await patterns.
Use when writing ANY code with async, actors, threads, or seeing ANY concurrency error. Covers Swift 6 concurrency, @MainActor, Sendable, data races, async/await patterns, performance optimization.
This skill should be used when writing or reviewing Swift code for iOS or macOS projects. Apply modern Swift 6+ best practices, concurrency patterns, API design guidelines, and migration strategies. Covers async/await, actors, MainActor, Sendable, typed throws, and Swift 6 breaking changes. Keywords: concurrency, async-await, actors, Sendable, typed-throws, Swift-6, migration, data-races, MainActor, nonisolated, isolated, iOS, macOS, SwiftUI, Combine, Swift-concurrency, actor-isolation, strict-concurrency, Swift-migration, modern-Swift, Swift-evolution, code-review, Swift-patterns, Apple-platforms, Xcode, iOS-development, macOS-development
Expert Swift decisions Claude doesn't instinctively make: struct vs class trade-offs, @MainActor placement, async/await vs Combine selection, memory management pitfalls, and iOS-specific anti-patterns. Use when writing Swift code for iOS/tvOS apps, reviewing Swift architecture decisions, or debugging memory/concurrency issues. Trigger keywords: Swift, iOS, tvOS, actor, async, Sendable, retain cycle, memory leak, struct, class, protocol, generic
Reviews Swift code for concurrency safety, error handling, memory management, and common mistakes. Use when reviewing .swift files for async/await patterns, actor isolation, Sendable conformance, or general Swift best practices.