2.3 KiB
2.3 KiB
name: design-sentry
description: Apply the Sentry design system to UI code. Use when the user wants their interface to look like Sentry, says "make it look like Sentry", "sentry design", or references the Sentry aesthetic. Category: Backend & DB. Vibe: Dark purple-black, developer tool aesthetic, code-editor feel.
Sentry Design System
Apply the Sentry brand design system to generate pixel-perfect UI that matches the Sentry aesthetic.
When to Use
- User says "make it look like Sentry" or "sentry style"
- User wants the Sentry design language applied to their project
- User references Sentry's visual aesthetic, colors, or typography
How to Use
- Read the full design system: Open
references/DESIGN.mdin this skill directory — it contains the complete Sentry design specification with 9 sections - Apply exactly: Use the exact hex codes, font stacks, spacing values, shadow systems, and component specs from the reference
- Follow the Do's and Don'ts: Section 7 contains brand-specific guardrails
- Use the Agent Prompt Guide: Section 9 has quick color references and ready-to-use component prompts
Quick Reference
- Category: Backend & DB
- Aesthetic: Dark purple-black, developer tool aesthetic, code-editor feel
Design System Sections
The references/DESIGN.md file contains:
- Visual Theme & Atmosphere — mood, density, design philosophy
- Color Palette & Roles — every color with semantic name, hex code, and function
- Typography Rules — font families, full hierarchy table with sizes, weights, line-heights
- Component Stylings — buttons, cards, inputs, badges, navigation with exact values
- Layout Principles — spacing system, grid, containers, whitespace philosophy
- Depth & Elevation — shadow levels, surface hierarchy
- Do's and Don'ts — brand-specific design guardrails
- Responsive Behavior — breakpoints, touch targets, collapse strategy
- Agent Prompt Guide — quick color reference and ready-to-use prompts
Precedence
When this skill is active, the Sentry design system overrides generic design rules for colors, typography, spacing, shadows, and component patterns. Generic rules still apply for motion choreography, performance guardrails, and anti-patterns not covered by this design system.