# JobyKit
An opinionated, agentic-first design-system kit for Phoenix + daisyUI apps.
JobyKit gives your AI coding agents a structured, machine-readable inventory
of every UI component your app exposes — with prop signatures, daisyUI basis,
rendered previews, and a stable contract — so design and prototype phases
don't accumulate a hodgepodge of UI markup that's hard to reason about.
## Why this exists
Most Phoenix apps end up with a sprawl of inline Tailwind classes, ad-hoc
component shapes, and undocumented variants. AI coding agents working on
those apps have to grep through HEEx to discover what's available and often
just write new markup from scratch — making the sprawl worse.
JobyKit pushes the codebase in the opposite direction. Your app declares a
**manifest** of its components, and JobyKit serves them at two surfaces:
* `/design` — a curated, kit-uniform page showing your **core wrappers**
(one per daisyUI primitive), the daisyUI catalogue, the wrapper contract,
and the build-order decision tree. Same shape across every JobyKit
consumer.
* `/custom-designs` — your app's **composites and domain components**,
separated from the kit's curated inventory so the kit page stays clean.
* `/design.json` — a **single combined JSON endpoint** that an agent can
fetch to get every component, attr, slot, and source path without
parsing rendered HEEx.
## Install
### Generate a new app from scratch
Install the kit as a global Mix archive:
```sh
mix archive.install hex joby_kit
```
Then from anywhere:
```sh
mix joby_kit.new my_app # wraps `mix phx.new` with the kit's HTML layer baked in
cd my_app
mix ecto.setup # creates the dev DB and runs migrations
mix phx.server
```
Visit `http://localhost:4000/`. `/design`, `/custom-designs`, and
`/design.json` are wired automatically.
### Add to an existing Phoenix app
Add `joby_kit` to your `deps`:
```elixir
def deps do
[
{:joby_kit, "~> 0.1"}
]
end
```
Then run one of:
```sh
# Adds the manifest, previews, design pages, and patches AGENTS.md +
# assets/css/app.css + your layout's nav. Idempotent.
mix joby_kit.install
# Same as install, plus replaces the default HomeLive at /, removes
# PageController/PageHTML. For a kit-flavored greenfield start.
mix joby_kit.bootstrap
```
> JobyKit ships function components built on `phoenix_live_view ~> 1.0` and
> assumes daisyUI is installed in your Tailwind config (the default for
> Phoenix 1.7+ apps generated with `mix phx.new`). Heroicons via the
> `heroicons` Tailwind plugin is also expected.
After running `install` or `bootstrap`, restart `mix phx.server`, visit
`/design` and `/custom-designs`, and `curl /design.json` to see the
manifest.
The rest of this README walks through the same steps manually for projects
that prefer a hand-rolled wiring.
### 1. Declare your manifest
```elixir
defmodule MyAppWeb.DesignManifest do
use JobyKit.Manifest
alias MyAppWeb.{CoreComponents, DesignPreviews}
category :core,
label: "Core wrappers",
description: "One wrapper per daisyUI primitive."
category :composite,
label: "Composites",
description: "Multi-primitive patterns reused across domains."
category :domain,
label: "Domain composites",
description: "Composites tied to a product area."
component CoreComponents, :button,
category: :core,
daisy_basis: "btn",
summary: "Standard text button.",
preview: &DesignPreviews.button_preview/1
component CoreComponents, :card,
category: :core,
daisy_basis: "card",
summary: "Padded content surface.",
preview: &DesignPreviews.card_preview/1
# ...one component/3 call per host wrapper
@doc """
Tells JobyKit which daisyUI primitives are wrapped, so the catalogue
rendering flips them to :wrapped and links to the matching signature card.
"""
def daisy_overrides do
%{
button: %{wrapper: "<.button>", anchor: "#jobykit-component-myappweb-corecomponents-button"},
card: %{wrapper: "<.card>", anchor: "#jobykit-component-myappweb-corecomponents-card"}
}
end
end
```
### 2. Write preview functions
```elixir
defmodule MyAppWeb.DesignPreviews do
use Phoenix.Component
# import your CoreComponents wrappers as needed
def button_preview(assigns) do
~H"""
<button class="btn btn-primary">Click me</button>
"""
end
# ...one *_preview/1 per registered component
end
```
### 3. Wire the routes
```elixir
defmodule MyAppWeb.Router do
use MyAppWeb, :router
pipeline :authenticated_json do
plug :accepts, ["json"]
plug :fetch_session
plug :put_secure_browser_headers
# plug your auth pipeline; the controller does not enforce auth
end
scope "/", MyAppWeb do
pipe_through [:browser, :require_authenticated_user]
live "/design", DesignSystemLive, :index
live "/custom-designs", CustomDesignsLive, :index
end
scope "/" do
pipe_through :authenticated_json
get "/design.json", JobyKit.ManifestController, :show,
private: %{joby_kit_manifest: MyAppWeb.DesignManifest}
end
end
```
### 4. Wrap the page components
```elixir
defmodule MyAppWeb.DesignSystemLive do
use MyAppWeb, :live_view
def mount(_, _, socket), do: {:ok, assign(socket, page_title: "Design System")}
def handle_event(_, _, socket), do: {:noreply, socket}
def render(assigns) do
~H"""
<Layouts.app flash={@flash}>
<JobyKit.PageComponent.page_component
manifest={MyAppWeb.DesignManifest}
custom_path={~p"/custom-designs"}
/>
</Layouts.app>
"""
end
end
defmodule MyAppWeb.CustomDesignsLive do
use MyAppWeb, :live_view
def mount(_, _, socket), do: {:ok, assign(socket, page_title: "Custom Designs")}
def handle_event(_, _, socket), do: {:noreply, socket}
def render(assigns) do
~H"""
<Layouts.app flash={@flash}>
<JobyKit.PageComponent.custom_page_component
manifest={MyAppWeb.DesignManifest}
back_to={~p"/design"}
/>
</Layouts.app>
"""
end
end
```
That's it. Visit `/design` for the kit-curated catalogue; visit
`/custom-designs` for your app's composites; `curl /design.json` to fetch the
combined inventory for your AI agent.
## The contract
JobyKit ships a five-step **build order** every consumer's `/design` page
displays:
1. **Domain composite?** Use it. Lives in a domain-scoped component module
in this app. Surfaces on the custom-designs page.
2. **Generic composite?** Use it. Multi-primitive pattern reused across
domains in this app. Surfaces on the custom-designs page.
3. **Core wrapper?** Use it. One wrapper per daisyUI primitive, defined
in `core_components`. Surfaces on the kit page.
4. **daisyUI primitive?** Wrap it as a core component first, then use the
wrapper. The daisyUI catalogue at the bottom of `/design` lists every
primitive.
5. **Build from tokens.** Tailwind + theme tokens only. Expose the result
as a core wrapper or composite and register it in the manifest.
And a five-rule **wrapper contract** every host component must satisfy:
1. Declare every prop with `attr`.
2. Carry `data-component` on the root element.
3. Accept `:rest, :global`.
4. Internals compose tokens + daisyUI primitives only.
5. Register every component in the host manifest.
The agent surface (`/design.json`) is a single source of truth even when the
two pages render different subsets — kit core, generic composites, and
domain composites are all returned together with category labels.
## What ships
* **Runtime modules** — `JobyKit.Manifest`, `JobyKit.Contract`,
`JobyKit.DaisyCatalogue`, `JobyKit.SignatureComponent`,
`JobyKit.PageComponent`, `JobyKit.ManifestController`,
`JobyKit.NavComponent`, and `JobyKit.CoreComponents` (kit-shipped
wrappers: `<.button>`, `<.card>`, `<.icon>`, `<.input>`,
`<.flash>`, `<.flash_group>`, `<.header>`, `<.list>`, `<.table>`).
* **Mix tasks** — `mix joby_kit.install` (existing app),
`mix joby_kit.bootstrap` (greenfield over an existing phx.new),
`mix joby_kit.new` (fresh app from scratch via `mix phx.new`),
`mix joby_kit.gen.wrapper` (scaffold a contract-clean wrapper +
manifest entry + preview), `mix joby_kit.lint` (verify the wrapper
contract).
* **Patchers** — `JobyKit.AgentsMd` and `JobyKit.NavPatcher` keep
AGENTS.md and the host's nav consistent with the kit's stance, both
idempotent.
## License
MIT. See `LICENSE`.