plugins/swift-engineering/skills/swift-testing/SKILL.md
Use when writing tests with Swift Testing (@Test,
npx skillsauth add johnrogers/claude-swift-engineering swift-testingInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
Modern testing with Swift Testing framework. No XCTest.
Swift Testing replaces XCTest with a modern macro-based approach that's more concise, has better async support, and runs tests in parallel by default. The core principle: if you learned XCTest, unlearn it—Swift Testing works differently.
| Macro | Use Case |
|-------|----------|
| #expect(expression) | Soft check — continues on failure. Use for most assertions. |
| #require(expression) | Hard check — stops test on failure. Use for preconditions only. |
let user = try #require(await fetchUser(id: "123"))
#expect(user.id == "123")
import Testing
@testable import YourModule
@Suite
struct FeatureTests {
let sut: FeatureType
init() throws {
sut = FeatureType()
}
@Test("Description of behavior")
func testBehavior() {
#expect(sut.someProperty == expected)
}
}
| XCTest | Swift Testing |
|--------|---------------|
| XCTAssert(expr) | #expect(expr) |
| XCTAssertEqual(a, b) | #expect(a == b) |
| XCTAssertNil(a) | #expect(a == nil) |
| XCTAssertNotNil(a) | #expect(a != nil) |
| try XCTUnwrap(a) | try #require(a) |
| XCTAssertThrowsError | #expect(throws: ErrorType.self) { } |
| XCTAssertNoThrow | #expect(throws: Never.self) { } |
#expect(throws: (any Error).self) { try riskyOperation() }
#expect(throws: NetworkError.self) { try fetch() }
#expect(throws: NetworkError.timeout) { try fetch() }
#expect(throws: Never.self) { try safeOperation() }
@Test("Validates inputs", arguments: zip(
["a", "b", "c"],
[1, 2, 3]
))
func testInputs(input: String, expected: Int) {
#expect(process(input) == expected)
}
Warning: Multiple collections WITHOUT zip creates Cartesian product.
@Test func testAsync() async throws {
let result = try await fetchData()
#expect(!result.isEmpty)
}
@Test func testCallback() async {
await confirmation("callback received") { confirm in
let sut = SomeType { confirm() }
sut.triggerCallback()
}
}
extension Tag {
@Tag static var fast: Self
@Tag static var networking: Self
}
@Test(.tags(.fast, .networking))
func testNetworkCall() { }
#require — Use #expect for most checkszip for paired inputs.serialized — Apply for thread-unsafe legacy testsOverusing #require — #require is for preconditions only. Using it for normal assertions means the test stops at first failure instead of reporting all failures. Use #expect for assertions, #require only when subsequent assertions depend on the value.
Cartesian product bugs — @Test(arguments: [a, b], [c, d]) creates 4 combinations, not 2. Always use zip to pair arguments correctly: arguments: zip([a, b], [c, d]).
Forgetting state isolation — Swift Testing creates a new test instance per test method. BUT shared state between tests (static variables, singletons) still leak. Use dependency injection or clean up singletons between tests.
Parallel test conflicts — Swift Testing runs tests in parallel by default. Tests touching shared files, databases, or singletons will interfere. Use .serialized or isolation strategies.
Not using async naturally — Wrapping async operations in Task { } defeats the purpose. Use async/await directly in test function signature: @Test func testAsync() async throws { }.
Confirmation misuse — confirmation is for verifying callbacks were called. Using it for assertions is wrong. Use #expect for assertions, confirmation for callback counts.
tools
Use when implementing iOS 17+ SwiftUI patterns: @Observable/@Bindable, MVVM architecture, NavigationStack, lazy loading, UIKit interop, accessibility (VoiceOver/Dynamic Type), async operations (.task/.refreshable), or migrating from ObservableObject/@StateObject.
tools
Use when implementing gesture composition (simultaneous, sequenced, exclusive), adaptive layouts (ViewThatFits, AnyLayout, size classes), or choosing architecture patterns (MVVM vs TCA vs vanilla, State-as-Bridge). Covers advanced SwiftUI patterns beyond basic views.
development
Swift code style conventions for clean, readable code. Use when writing Swift code to ensure consistent formatting, naming, organization, and idiomatic patterns.
development
Use when implementing Network.framework connections (NWConnection, NetworkConnection), debugging connection failures, migrating from sockets/URLSession streams, or handling network transitions. Covers UDP/TCP patterns, structured concurrency networking (iOS 26+), and common anti-patterns.