superwall-editor

安装量: 349
排名: #9184

安装

npx skills add https://github.com/superwall/skills --skill superwall-editor

Superwall Paywall Editor Paywalls are built in a browser editor that exposes its tools over an authenticated relay. This skill drives that relay from the CLI — the exact same surface the MCP gateway uses — so every tool you invoke runs inside the live browser session the user has open. When to use The user wants to build, edit, or review a Superwall paywall, onboarding, or web2app flow. The user pastes a pairing code and asks you to take over editing. The user asks "what tools can you run right now?" — discover them via the browser, not from memory. Start here: attach, then discover Never assume a tool name or signature from memory. The browser is the source of truth and its tool set changes across releases. Preferred API launch flow: Create an auto-expose URL: scripts/sw-editor.sh expose --application-id --paywall-id --agent-name --open --wait Ask the user to complete browser authorization if prompted. The editor auto-exposes; do not ask them to click the expose button. Discover what is available right now: scripts/sw-editor.sh tools Invoke tools: scripts/sw-editor.sh call --args '' Fallback manual flow: Ask the user for the pairing code shown in the editor UI. Attach: scripts/sw-editor.sh attach Continue with tools and call . Full CLI reference: references/cli.md . How to build and edit Workflow, build order, and when to use which tool: references/workflow.md Native sw- elements (multiple-choice, indicator, drawer, picker, lottie, navigation): references/native-elements.md Design standards, review checkpoints, typography, and conversion principles: references/design.md Orchestration rules Always establish an attachment before editing. Use expose --open --wait when possible, otherwise use attach . tools , call , status , release all require an attached session. Prefer expose --open --wait when you have SUPERWALL_API_KEY , an application id, and a paywall id. It uses the same relay as manual pairing but removes the human pairing-code step. Before calling a tool you have not used this session, run tools to confirm it exists and to read the current parameter schema. Tools are defined in the browser bundle — an updated editor ships new or renamed tools without any change to this skill. Use get_screenshot (if present in the tool list) every 2–3 modifications to verify. Don't fly blind. Prefer semantic tools ( update_styles , set_text_content , set_dynamic_value , move_nodes ) over re-running write_html on existing structure. See references/workflow.md . Prefer native sw- elements over hand-rolled

recreations whenever the UI represents a semantic control. See references/native-elements.md . When parsing CLI output, use jq — never Python. Example: sw-editor.sh call get_subtree --args '...' | jq -r '.content[0].text' Release when the user is done: scripts/sw-editor.sh release . When things go wrong session_not_ready : the browser disconnected or reloaded. Ask the user to bring the editor tab back, then re-attach (the pairing code rotates — they'll need to read you the new one). session_locked : another client is already attached. The user either attached from another MCP client, or a previous CLI attachment wasn't released. They can detach from the editor UI and you can retry. unauthorized : the controller token is stale — re-attach with a fresh pairing code. attach_failed: provide a valid current pairingCode : pairing codes expire after ~10 minutes and rotate on detach. Ask the user to show you the current one.
返回排行榜