Requirements
- Target platform
- OpenClaw
- Install method
- Manual import
- Extraction
- Extract archive
- Prerequisites
- OpenClaw
- Primary doc
- SKILL.md
Build prototypes you can click. UI/UX wireframes, app mockups, and fully interactive HTML prototypes — from napkin sketch to clickable experience in one prompt. Landing pages, mobile app screens, SaaS dashboards, design systems, and user flows — prototyped and playable, not just pretty.
Build prototypes you can click. UI/UX wireframes, app mockups, and fully interactive HTML prototypes — from napkin sketch to clickable experience in one prompt. Landing pages, mobile app screens, SaaS dashboards, design systems, and user flows — prototyped and playable, not just pretty.
Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.
I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.
I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.
Build prototypes you can click. UI/UX wireframes, app mockups, and fully interactive HTML prototypes — from napkin sketch to clickable experience in one prompt. Every other AI design tool gives you static images. CellCog builds working prototypes — real HTML, real interactions, real user flows you can click through and share with stakeholders. Landing pages, mobile app screens, SaaS dashboards, design systems — prototyped and playable, not just pretty.
This skill requires the cellcog skill for SDK setup and API calls. clawhub install cellcog Read the cellcog skill first for SDK setup. This skill shows you what's possible. Quick pattern (v1.0+): # Fire-and-forget - returns immediately result = client.create_chat( prompt="[your prototype request]", notify_session_key="agent:main:main", task_label="prototype-task", chat_mode="agent" # Agent mode for most prototypes ) # Daemon notifies you when complete - do NOT poll
Static mockups create a fundamental gap: stakeholders see pictures, not experiences. The difference matters: Static MockupInteractive Prototype"Imagine clicking this button"Click the button, see what happens"This would scroll to..."Scroll and see the content load"The hover state looks like..."Hover and watch the animation"Trust me, the flow makes sense"Walk through the flow yourself CellCog generates real HTML/CSS/JS prototypes hosted on live URLs. Share a link, get feedback on the actual experience — not on someone's imagination of the experience.
Validate your messaging and design: SaaS Landing Pages: "Create a landing page for an AI writing assistant — hero, features, pricing, testimonials, CTA" Product Launch Pages: "Build a launch page for a new fitness app with countdown and email signup" Event Pages: "Create a conference landing page with schedule, speakers, and registration" Portfolio Sites: "Build a personal portfolio landing page for a UX designer" Example prompt: "Create an interactive landing page prototype for 'FlowState' — a productivity app for developers: Sections: Hero: 'Code in the zone. Stay in the zone.' with app screenshot and CTA Problem: Distractions kill developer flow (statistics) Solution: How FlowState blocks distractions intelligently Features: 3-4 key features with icons Pricing: Free, Pro ($12/mo), Team ($8/user/mo) Testimonials: 3 developer quotes Final CTA Style: Dark theme, developer-friendly, monospace accents Make all buttons and navigation interactive."
Design full app experiences: Onboarding Flows: "Create a 5-screen onboarding flow for a meditation app" Core Features: "Prototype the main dashboard and navigation for a fitness tracking app" E-commerce: "Build a product browse → detail → cart → checkout flow for a fashion app" Social Features: "Prototype a profile page, feed, and messaging interface" Example prompt: "Prototype a mobile food delivery app (phone-sized viewport): Screens: Home — restaurant grid with search and category filters Restaurant — menu with items, ratings, delivery time Item detail — customization options, add to cart Cart — order summary, delivery address, payment Order tracking — live status with map placeholder Make navigation between screens work with smooth transitions. Style: Clean, modern, Uber Eats / DoorDash inspired."
Prototype complex business tools: Analytics Dashboards: "Create a marketing analytics dashboard with real chart interactions" Admin Panels: "Build a user management panel with tables, filters, and modals" CRM Interfaces: "Prototype a sales pipeline view with drag-and-drop kanban board" Settings Pages: "Create a comprehensive settings page with tabs, forms, and toggles" Example prompt: "Prototype a SaaS project management dashboard: Left sidebar: Navigation (Projects, Tasks, Team, Reports, Settings) Main area: Overview: KPI cards (tasks completed, overdue, in progress) Kanban board: Columns for To Do, In Progress, Review, Done Task cards with assignee avatars, priority tags, due dates Interactions: Sidebar navigation switches views Clicking a task card opens a detail modal Filter dropdown for project/team member Style: Clean, professional, Notion/Linear inspired."
Build reusable design foundations: Component Libraries: "Create a UI component library: buttons, inputs, cards, modals, navigation" Style Guides: "Build an interactive style guide showing typography, colors, spacing, and components" Form Patterns: "Prototype common form patterns: login, signup, multi-step wizard, settings" Navigation Patterns: "Create examples of sidebar nav, top nav, bottom tab bar, and hamburger menu"
Quick structural explorations: Low-Fidelity Wireframes: "Create grayscale wireframes for a blog platform — home, article, author pages" User Flows: "Wireframe the complete signup → onboarding → first action flow for a project management tool" Layout Explorations: "Show 3 different layout approaches for a real estate listing page" Information Architecture: "Wireframe the navigation structure for an e-learning platform with courses, lessons, and progress tracking"
CellCog prototypes can include: FeatureDescriptionNavigationWorking links, page transitions, tab switchingInteractionsHover states, click actions, toggles, accordionsFormsInput fields, validation states, dropdowns, checkboxesModals & OverlaysPopup dialogs, slide-out panels, tooltipsResponsive DesignAdapts to desktop, tablet, and mobile viewportsAnimationsSmooth transitions, loading states, micro-interactionsData DisplayCharts, tables, cards with realistic sample dataDark/Light ThemesTheme switching support
FormatBest ForInteractive HTML (Default)Clickable prototypes hosted on live URL — share with anyoneStatic ImagesScreenshots for documentation or comparisonPDFWireframe documentation for handoff Interactive HTML is the default. That's the whole point — prototypes you can click.
ScenarioRecommended ModeIndividual pages, single components, wireframes"agent"Full app prototypes with multiple interconnected screens, design systems"agent team" Use "agent" for most prototypes. Landing pages, individual app screens, and component designs execute well in agent mode. Use "agent team" for full application prototypes — multi-screen apps where navigation, state, and user flows need to work together cohesively.
SaaS landing page: "Create a landing page for 'CodeReview.ai' — an AI code review tool: Hero: 'Ship better code. Ship it faster.' with demo video placeholder Social proof: 'Trusted by 500+ engineering teams' Features: AI-powered reviews, integration with GitHub/GitLab, security scanning Pricing: Starter (free), Pro ($29/mo), Enterprise (custom) Dark theme, developer-focused, green accent color. All navigation and CTAs should be interactive." Mobile app prototype: "Prototype a habit tracking app (mobile viewport): Tab bar: Today, Habits, Stats, Profile Today screen: List of today's habits with checkboxes, streak counts, and progress ring Habits screen: All habits with edit/delete, add new habit button Stats screen: Charts showing completion rates, longest streaks, weekly/monthly view Profile screen: Settings, notification preferences, export data Tab navigation should work. Checking habits should animate. Style: Minimal, calming, inspired by Streaks app." Design system: "Build an interactive design system for a fintech startup: Colors: Primary (deep blue), secondary (teal), accent (amber), semantic (success/warning/error) Typography: Scale from h1 to body to caption with clear hierarchy Components: Buttons (primary, secondary, ghost, destructive — each with hover/active/disabled states) Input fields (default, focused, error, disabled) Cards (simple, interactive, stat card) Table with sortable headers Modal dialog Toast notifications Show each component with interactive states. Professional, banking-grade aesthetic." Wireframe exploration: "Create 3 different layout approaches for an AI chatbot interface: Option A: Full-page chat (like ChatGPT) Option B: Side panel chat with main content area Option C: Floating chat widget Each should include: message input, conversation history, suggested prompts, and settings access. Grayscale wireframes, focused on layout and information hierarchy."
Describe the interactions: "Button opens a modal" or "Tabs switch content" — tell CellCog what should happen, not just what should appear. Reference existing products: "Like Notion's sidebar" or "Stripe's pricing page" communicates more than paragraphs of description. Specify viewport: "Mobile phone viewport" vs "Full desktop" changes the entire design approach. Include realistic content: Real text, real numbers, real labels — not "Lorem ipsum". Prototypes with real content get better feedback. State the purpose: "For user testing", "For investor demo", "For developer handoff" — context shapes fidelity level. Think in flows, not pages: "Signup → Onboarding → Dashboard" is more useful than 3 disconnected page requests.
Code helpers, APIs, CLIs, browser automation, testing, and developer operations.
Largest current source with strong distribution and engagement signals.