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mobile-ios-design

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iOS Mobile Design

Master iOS Human Interface Guidelines (HIG) and SwiftUI patterns to build polished, native iOS applications that feel at home on Apple platforms.

When to Use This Skill

  • Designing iOS app interfaces following Apple HIG
  • Building SwiftUI views and layouts
  • Implementing iOS navigation patterns (NavigationStack, TabView, sheets)
  • Creating adaptive layouts for iPhone and iPad
  • Using SF Symbols and system typography
  • Building accessible iOS interfaces
  • Implementing iOS-specific gestures and interactions
  • Designing for Dynamic Type and Dark Mode

Core Concepts

1. Human Interface Guidelines Principles

Clarity: Content is legible, icons are precise, adornments are subtle Deference: UI helps users understand content without competing with it Depth: Visual layers and motion convey hierarchy and enable navigation

Platform Considerations:

  • iOS: Touch-first, compact displays, portrait orientation
  • iPadOS: Larger canvas, multitasking, pointer support
  • visionOS: Spatial computing, eye/hand input

2. SwiftUI Layout System

Stack-Based Layouts:

// Vertical stack with alignment
VStack(alignment: .leading, spacing: 12) {
    Text("Title")
        .font(.headline)
    Text("Subtitle")
        .font(.subheadline)
        .foregroundStyle(.secondary)
}

// Horizontal stack with flexible spacing
HStack {
    Image(systemName: "star.fill")
    Text("Featured")
    Spacer()
    Text("View All")
        .foregroundStyle(.blue)
}

Grid Layouts:

// Adaptive grid that fills available width
LazyVGrid(columns: [
    GridItem(.adaptive(minimum: 150, maximum: 200))
], spacing: 16) {
    ForEach(items) { item in
        ItemCard(item: item)
    }
}

// Fixed column grid
LazyVGrid(columns: [
    GridItem(.flexible()),
    GridItem(.flexible()),
    GridItem(.flexible())
], spacing: 12) {
    ForEach(items) { item in
        ItemThumbnail(item: item)
    }
}

3. Navigation Patterns

NavigationStack (iOS 16+):

struct ContentView: View {
    @State private var path = NavigationPath()

    var body: some View {
        NavigationStack(path: $path) {
            List(items) { item in
                NavigationLink(value: item) {
                    ItemRow(item: item)
                }
            }
            .navigationTitle("Items")
            .navigationDestination(for: Item.self) { item in
                ItemDetailView(item: item)
            }
        }
    }
}

TabView (iOS 18+):

struct MainTabView: View {
    @State private var selectedTab = 0

    var body: some View {
        TabView(selection: $selectedTab) {
            Tab("Home", systemImage: "house", value: 0) {
                HomeView()
            }

            Tab("Search", systemImage: "magnifyingglass", value: 1) {
                SearchView()
            }

            Tab("Profile", systemImage: "person", value: 2) {
                ProfileView()
            }
        }
    }
}

4. System Integration

SF Symbols:

// Basic symbol
Image(systemName: "heart.fill")
    .foregroundStyle(.red)

// Symbol with rendering mode
Image(systemName: "cloud.sun.fill")
    .symbolRenderingMode(.multicolor)

// Variable symbol (iOS 16+)
Image(systemName: "speaker.wave.3.fill", variableValue: volume)

// Symbol effect (iOS 17+)
Image(systemName: "bell.fill")
    .symbolEffect(.bounce, value: notificationCount)

Dynamic Type:

// Use semantic fonts
Text("Headline")
    .font(.headline)

Text("Body text that scales with user preferences")
    .font(.body)

// Custom font that respects Dynamic Type
Text("Custom")
    .font(.custom("Avenir", size: 17, relativeTo: .body))

5. Visual Design

Colors and Materials:

// Semantic colors that adapt to light/dark mode
Text("Primary")
    .foregroundStyle(.primary)
Text("Secondary")
    .foregroundStyle(.secondary)

// System materials for blur effects
Rectangle()
    .fill(.ultraThinMaterial)
    .frame(height: 100)

// Vibrant materials for overlays
Text("Overlay")
    .padding()
    .background(.regularMaterial, in: RoundedRectangle(cornerRadius: 12))

Shadows and Depth:

// Standard card shadow
RoundedRectangle(cornerRadius: 16)
    .fill(.background)
    .shadow(color: .black.opacity(0.1), radius: 8, y: 4)

// Elevated appearance
.shadow(radius: 2, y: 1)
.shadow(radius: 8, y: 4)

Quick Start Component

import SwiftUI

struct FeatureCard: View {
    let title: String
    let description: String
    let systemImage: String

    var body: some View {
        HStack(spacing: 16) {
            Image(systemName: systemImage)
                .font(.title)
                .foregroundStyle(.blue)
                .frame(width: 44, height: 44)
                .background(.blue.opacity(0.1), in: Circle())

            VStack(alignment: .leading, spacing: 4) {
                Text(title)
                    .font(.headline)
                Text(description)
                    .font(.subheadline)
                    .foregroundStyle(.secondary)
                    .lineLimit(2)
            }

            Spacer()

            Image(systemName: "chevron.right")
                .foregroundStyle(.tertiary)
        }
        .padding()
        .background(.background, in: RoundedRectangle(cornerRadius: 12))
        .shadow(color: .black.opacity(0.05), radius: 4, y: 2)
    }
}

Best Practices

  1. Use Semantic Colors: Always use .primary, .secondary, .background for automatic light/dark mode support
  2. Embrace SF Symbols: Use system symbols for consistency and automatic accessibility
  3. Support Dynamic Type: Use semantic fonts (.body, .headline) instead of fixed sizes
  4. Add Accessibility: Include .accessibilityLabel() and .accessibilityHint() modifiers
  5. Use Safe Areas: Respect safeAreaInset and avoid hardcoded padding at screen edges
  6. Implement State Restoration: Use @SceneStorage for preserving user state
  7. Support iPad Multitasking: Design for split view and slide over
  8. Test on Device: Simulator doesn't capture full haptic and performance experience

Common Issues

  • Layout Breaking: Use .fixedSize() sparingly; prefer flexible layouts
  • Performance Issues: Use LazyVStack/LazyHStack for long scrolling lists
  • Navigation Bugs: Ensure NavigationLink values are Hashable
  • Dark Mode Problems: Avoid hardcoded colors; use semantic or asset catalog colors
  • Accessibility Failures: Test with VoiceOver enabled
  • Memory Leaks: Watch for strong reference cycles in closures

Resources

Source

git clone https://github.com/wshobson/agents/blob/main/plugins/ui-design/skills/mobile-ios-design/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Learn to design and implement native iOS interfaces using Apple’s Human Interface Guidelines (HIG) and SwiftUI patterns. It covers navigation, adaptive layouts, system symbols, typography, accessibility, and dark mode to ensure apps feel native on iPhone, iPad, and beyond.

How This Skill Works

The skill combines core concepts: framing interfaces around HIG principles, building layouts with SwiftUI stacks and grids, applying platform-specific navigation with NavigationStack and TabView, and integrating system features like SF Symbols, Dynamic Type, and Dark Mode. Designers translate these patterns into reusable components and guided UI specs that developers implement in code.

When to Use It

  • Designing iOS interfaces that follow Apple’s Human Interface Guidelines
  • Building SwiftUI views and layouts for fast, consistent UI
  • Implementing iOS navigation patterns (NavigationStack, TabView, sheets)
  • Creating adaptive layouts for iPhone and iPad
  • Incorporating SF Symbols, Dynamic Type, Dark Mode, and accessibility considerations

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Review the Human Interface Guidelines and plan an adaptive layout using SwiftUI stacks and grids
  2. Step 2: Implement a sample screen with VStack/HStack, a LazyVGrid, and a NavigationStack with SF Symbols
  3. Step 3: Test in Light/Dark mode and on both iPhone and iPad, then iterate for accessibility and polish

Best Practices

  • Anchor UI to the three HIG principles: clarity, deference, and depth
  • Use SwiftUI stacks (VStack/HStack) and grids (LazyVGrid) for predictable, scalable layouts
  • Leverage NavigationStack and TabView for clear, native navigation flows
  • Adopt adaptive layouts and Dynamic Type to support various devices and user preferences
  • Design with accessibility in mind: scalable typography, sufficient contrast, and large tap targets

Example Use Cases

  • A content app with a clean, readable layout that follows HIG typography and uses SF Symbols for icons
  • A gallery grid implemented with LazyVGrid and adaptive columns that scales to iPhone and iPad
  • A detail view stack navigated via NavigationStack with destination views and back navigation
  • An app using TabView to separate Home, Search, and Profile sections with appropriate system icons
  • An interface that supports Dynamic Type and Dark Mode across multiple screens and components

Frequently Asked Questions

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