plugins/lisa-expo-copilot/skills/use-dom/SKILL.md
Use Expo DOM components to run web code in a webview on native and as-is on web. Migrate web code to native incrementally.
npx skillsauth add codyswanngt/lisa use-domInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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DOM components allow web code to run verbatim in a webview on native platforms while rendering as-is on web. This enables using web-only libraries like recharts, react-syntax-highlighter, or any React web library in your Expo app without modification.
Use DOM components when you need:
Avoid DOM components when:
_layout files cannot be DOM componentsCreate a new file with the 'use dom'; directive at the top:
// components/WebChart.tsx
"use dom";
export default function WebChart({
data,
}: {
data: number[];
dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
return (
<div style={{ padding: 20 }}>
<h2>Chart Data</h2>
<ul>
{data.map((value, i) => (
<li key={i}>{value}</li>
))}
</ul>
</div>
);
}
'use dom'; directive at the top of the filedom PropEvery DOM component receives a special dom prop for webview configuration. Always type it in your props:
"use dom";
interface Props {
content: string;
dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}
export default function MyComponent({ content }: Props) {
return <div>{content}</div>;
}
dom Prop Options// Disable body scrolling
<DOMComponent dom={{ scrollEnabled: false }} />
// Flow under the notch (disable safe area insets)
<DOMComponent dom={{ contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior: "never" }} />
// Control size manually
<DOMComponent dom={{ style: { width: 300, height: 400 } }} />
// Combine options
<DOMComponent
dom={{
scrollEnabled: false,
contentInsetAdjustmentBehavior: "never",
style: { width: '100%', height: 500 }
}}
/>
Pass async functions as props to expose native functionality to the DOM component:
// app/index.tsx (native)
import { Alert } from "react-native";
import DOMComponent from "@/components/dom-component";
export default function Screen() {
return (
<DOMComponent
showAlert={async (message: string) => {
Alert.alert("From Web", message);
}}
saveData={async (data: { name: string; value: number }) => {
// Save to native storage, database, etc.
console.log("Saving:", data);
return { success: true };
}}
/>
);
}
// components/dom-component.tsx
"use dom";
interface Props {
showAlert: (message: string) => Promise<void>;
saveData: (data: {
name: string;
value: number;
}) => Promise<{ success: boolean }>;
dom?: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}
export default function DOMComponent({ showAlert, saveData }: Props) {
const handleClick = async () => {
await showAlert("Hello from the webview!");
const result = await saveData({ name: "test", value: 42 });
console.log("Save result:", result);
};
return <button onClick={handleClick}>Trigger Native Action</button>;
}
DOM components can use any web library:
// components/syntax-highlight.tsx
"use dom";
import SyntaxHighlighter from "react-syntax-highlighter";
import { docco } from "react-syntax-highlighter/dist/esm/styles/hljs";
interface Props {
code: string;
language: string;
dom?: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}
export default function SyntaxHighlight({ code, language }: Props) {
return (
<SyntaxHighlighter language={language} style={docco}>
{code}
</SyntaxHighlighter>
);
}
// components/chart.tsx
"use dom";
import {
LineChart,
Line,
XAxis,
YAxis,
CartesianGrid,
Tooltip,
} from "recharts";
interface Props {
data: Array<{ name: string; value: number }>;
dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}
export default function Chart({ data }: Props) {
return (
<LineChart width={400} height={300} data={data}>
<CartesianGrid strokeDasharray="3 3" />
<XAxis dataKey="name" />
<YAxis />
<Tooltip />
<Line type="monotone" dataKey="value" stroke="#8884d8" />
</LineChart>
);
}
CSS imports must be in the DOM component file since they run in isolated context:
// components/styled-component.tsx
"use dom";
import "@/styles.css"; // CSS file in same directory
export default function StyledComponent({
dom,
}: {
dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
return (
<div className="container">
<h1 className="title">Styled Content</h1>
</div>
);
}
Or use inline styles / CSS-in-JS:
"use dom";
const styles = {
container: {
padding: 20,
backgroundColor: "#f0f0f0",
},
title: {
fontSize: 24,
color: "#333",
},
};
export default function StyledComponent({
dom,
}: {
dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
return (
<div style={styles.container}>
<h1 style={styles.title}>Styled Content</h1>
</div>
);
}
The expo-router <Link /> component and router API work inside DOM components:
"use dom";
import { Link, useRouter } from "expo-router";
export default function Navigation({
dom,
}: {
dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
const router = useRouter();
return (
<nav>
<Link href="/about">About</Link>
<button onClick={() => router.push("/settings")}>Settings</button>
</nav>
);
}
These hooks don't work directly in DOM components because they need synchronous access to native routing state:
useLocalSearchParams()useGlobalSearchParams()usePathname()useSegments()useRootNavigation()useRootNavigationState()Solution: Read these values in the native parent and pass as props:
// app/[id].tsx (native)
import { useLocalSearchParams, usePathname } from "expo-router";
import DOMComponent from "@/components/dom-component";
export default function Screen() {
const { id } = useLocalSearchParams();
const pathname = usePathname();
return <DOMComponent id={id as string} pathname={pathname} />;
}
// components/dom-component.tsx
"use dom";
interface Props {
id: string;
pathname: string;
dom?: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}
export default function DOMComponent({ id, pathname }: Props) {
return (
<div>
<p>Current ID: {id}</p>
<p>Current Path: {pathname}</p>
</div>
);
}
Check if code is running in a DOM component:
"use dom";
import { IS_DOM } from "expo/dom";
export default function Component({
dom,
}: {
dom?: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
return <div>{IS_DOM ? "Running in DOM component" : "Running natively"}</div>;
}
Prefer requiring assets instead of using the public directory:
"use dom";
// Good - bundled with the component
const logo = require("../assets/logo.png");
export default function Component({
dom,
}: {
dom: import("expo/dom").DOMProps;
}) {
return <img src={logo} alt="Logo" />;
}
Import and use DOM components like regular components:
// app/index.tsx
import { View, Text } from "react-native";
import WebChart from "@/components/web-chart";
import CodeBlock from "@/components/code-block";
export default function HomeScreen() {
return (
<View style={{ flex: 1 }}>
<Text>Native content above</Text>
<WebChart data={[10, 20, 30, 40, 50]} dom={{ style: { height: 300 } }} />
<CodeBlock
code="const x = 1;"
language="javascript"
dom={{ scrollEnabled: true }}
/>
<Text>Native content below</Text>
</View>
);
}
| Platform | Behavior | | -------- | ----------------------------------- | | iOS | Rendered in WKWebView | | Android | Rendered in WebView | | Web | Rendered as-is (no webview wrapper) |
On web, the dom prop is ignored since no webview is needed.
documentation
Onboard a user to the project via its LLM Wiki. Interviews the user about themselves in relation to the project, captures that to project-scoped memory only, then gives a guided tour of what the project is and sample questions they can ask. Use when someone is new to the project or asks to be onboarded. Read-mostly — it does not open PRs or write PII into the wiki.
documentation
Migrate an existing, hand-rolled wiki implementation onto the lisa-wiki kernel — phased and compatibility-first, with a strict no-loss guarantee. Use when adopting lisa-wiki in a repo that already has its own wiki/, ingest skills, docs, or roles. Renaming things into the canonical shape is fine; losing functionality or data is not. Ends by running /doctor.
development
Health-check the LLM Wiki. Reports orphan pages, contradictions, stale claims, broken internal links, missing index/log coverage, structure-manifest violations, and secret/tenant leaks. Use periodically or before hardening a wiki. Read-only — it reports findings, it does not fix them.
testing
Ingest source material into the LLM Wiki. With an argument (URL, file path, or prompt) it ingests that one source; with no argument it runs a full ingest across every enabled non-external-write source. Routes to the right connector, then runs the ordered pipeline (source note → synthesis → index → log → verify → state → commit/PR). Use whenever new knowledge should enter the wiki.