Wireframing
Skill Profile
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Overview
Wireframing is creating low-fidelity visual representations of user interfaces to explore ideas, validate concepts, and communicate design solutions before detailed design work. Effective wireframing focuses on structure and layout rather than visual details, enabling rapid iteration and feedback.
Why This Matters
- Rapid Iteration: Quick exploration of multiple ideas
- Early Validation: Identify issues before detailed design work
- Communication: Visual communication of design concepts
- Cost Efficiency: Reduce rework by validating early
Core Concepts & Rules
1. Core Principles
- Follow established patterns and conventions
- Maintain consistency across codebase
- Document decisions and trade-offs
2. Implementation Guidelines
- Start with the simplest viable solution
- Iterate based on feedback and requirements
- Test thoroughly before deployment
Inputs / Outputs / Contracts
- Inputs:
- Requirements and user stories
- Design concepts and ideas
- Brand guidelines and style guides
- Stakeholder feedback and requirements
- Entry Conditions:
- Requirements are documented
- Design concepts are identified
- Stakeholders are available for feedback
- Outputs:
- Wireframes for all key screens
- User flows and journey maps
- Site maps and information architecture
- Interactive prototypes for testing
- Artifacts Required (Deliverables):
- Wireframe files (Figma, Sketch, etc.)
- User flow diagrams
- Site map documentation
- Interactive prototypes
- Design rationale documentation
- Acceptance Evidence:
- All requirements are addressed
- User flows are complete
- Stakeholders approve wireframes
- Handoff to development is clear
- Success Criteria:
- All screens wireframed
- User flows documented
- Stakeholder approval obtained
- Development handoff complete
Skill Composition
- Depends on: Design Systems, UX Writing, Design Handoff
- Compatible with: Frontend Development, Product Management, User Research
- Conflicts with: None
- Related Skills: design-systems, design-handoff, user-research
Quick Start / Implementation Example
- Review requirements and constraints
- Set up development environment
- Implement core functionality following patterns
- Write tests for critical paths
- Run tests and fix issues
- Document any deviations or decisions
# Example implementation following best practices
def example_function():
# Your implementation here
pass
Assumptions / Constraints / Non-goals
- Assumptions:
- Development environment is properly configured
- Required dependencies are available
- Team has basic understanding of domain
- Constraints:
- Must follow existing codebase conventions
- Time and resource limitations
- Compatibility requirements
- Non-goals:
- This skill does not cover edge cases outside scope
- Not a replacement for formal training
Compatibility & Prerequisites
- Supported Versions:
- Python 3.8+
- Node.js 16+
- Modern browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge)
- Required AI Tools:
- Code editor (VS Code recommended)
- Testing framework appropriate for language
- Version control (Git)
- Dependencies:
- Language-specific package manager
- Build tools
- Testing libraries
- Environment Setup:
.env.example keys: API_KEY, DATABASE_URL (no values)
Test Scenario Matrix (QA Strategy)
| Type |
Focus Area |
Required Scenarios / Mocks |
| Unit |
Core Logic |
Must cover primary logic and at least 3 edge/error cases. Target minimum 80% coverage |
| Integration |
DB / API |
All external API calls or database connections must be mocked during unit tests |
| E2E |
User Journey |
Critical user flows to test |
| Performance |
Latency / Load |
Benchmark requirements |
| Security |
Vuln / Auth |
SAST/DAST or dependency audit |
| Frontend |
UX / A11y |
Accessibility checklist (WCAG), Performance Budget (Lighthouse score) |
Technical Guardrails & Security Threat Model
1. Security & Privacy (Threat Model)
- Top Threats: Injection attacks, authentication bypass, data exposure
2. Performance & Resources
3. Architecture & Scalability
4. Observability & Reliability
Agent Directives & Error Recovery
(ข้อกำหนดสำหรับ AI Agent ในการคิดและแก้ปัญหาเมื่อเกิดข้อผิดพลาด)
- Thinking Process: Analyze root cause before fixing. Do not brute-force.
- Fallback Strategy: Stop after 3 failed test attempts. Output root cause and ask for human intervention/clarification.
- Self-Review: Check against Guardrails & Anti-patterns before finalizing.
- Output Constraints: Output ONLY the modified code block. Do not explain unless asked.
Definition of Done (DoD) Checklist
Anti-patterns / Pitfalls
- ⛔ Don't: Log PII, catch-all exception, N+1 queries
- ⚠️ Watch out for: Common symptoms and quick fixes
- 💡 Instead: Use proper error handling, pagination, and logging
Reference Links & Examples
- Internal documentation and examples
- Official documentation and best practices
- Community resources and discussions
Versioning & Changelog
- Version: 1.0.0
- Changelog:
- 2026-02-22: Initial version with complete template structure