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Add 5 rule files for Swift following the established pattern used by TypeScript, Python, and Go rule sets. Covers Swift 6 strict concurrency, Swift Testing framework, protocol-oriented patterns, Keychain-based secret management, and SwiftFormat/SwiftLint hooks.
Rules
Structure
Rules are organized into a common layer plus language-specific directories:
rules/
├── common/ # Language-agnostic principles (always install)
│ ├── coding-style.md
│ ├── git-workflow.md
│ ├── testing.md
│ ├── performance.md
│ ├── patterns.md
│ ├── hooks.md
│ ├── agents.md
│ └── security.md
├── typescript/ # TypeScript/JavaScript specific
├── python/ # Python specific
├── golang/ # Go specific
└── swift/ # Swift specific
- common/ contains universal principles — no language-specific code examples.
- Language directories extend the common rules with framework-specific patterns, tools, and code examples. Each file references its common counterpart.
Installation
Option 1: Install Script (Recommended)
# Install common + one or more language-specific rule sets
./install.sh typescript
./install.sh python
./install.sh golang
./install.sh swift
# Install multiple languages at once
./install.sh typescript python
Option 2: Manual Installation
Important: Copy entire directories — do NOT flatten with
/*. Common and language-specific directories contain files with the same names. Flattening them into one directory causes language-specific files to overwrite common rules, and breaks the relative../common/references used by language-specific files.
# Install common rules (required for all projects)
cp -r rules/common ~/.claude/rules/common
# Install language-specific rules based on your project's tech stack
cp -r rules/typescript ~/.claude/rules/typescript
cp -r rules/python ~/.claude/rules/python
cp -r rules/golang ~/.claude/rules/golang
cp -r rules/swift ~/.claude/rules/swift
# Attention ! ! ! Configure according to your actual project requirements; the configuration here is for reference only.
Rules vs Skills
- Rules define standards, conventions, and checklists that apply broadly (e.g., "80% test coverage", "no hardcoded secrets").
- Skills (
skills/directory) provide deep, actionable reference material for specific tasks (e.g.,python-patterns,golang-testing).
Language-specific rule files reference relevant skills where appropriate. Rules tell you what to do; skills tell you how to do it.
Adding a New Language
To add support for a new language (e.g., rust/):
- Create a
rules/rust/directory - Add files that extend the common rules:
coding-style.md— formatting tools, idioms, error handling patternstesting.md— test framework, coverage tools, test organizationpatterns.md— language-specific design patternshooks.md— PostToolUse hooks for formatters, linters, type checkerssecurity.md— secret management, security scanning tools
- Each file should start with:
> This file extends [common/xxx.md](../common/xxx.md) with <Language> specific content. - Reference existing skills if available, or create new ones under
skills/.