Created domain-specific AGENTS.md files: - ios-dev/workspace/AGENTS.md: iOS/SwiftUI workflow, patterns, examples - web-dev/workspace/AGENTS.md: Next.js/Supabase patterns, table naming rules - research/workspace/AGENTS.md: Research methodology, output format, verification Each AGENTS.md includes: - Standard workflow - File organization patterns - Code examples - Common tasks with guides - Tool-specific patterns Updated SPECIALIZED_AGENTS.md with: - Agent workspace structure documentation - Explanation of key files - Why AGENTS.md matters for subagents
5.9 KiB
Specialized Agent Profiles
Created: February 22, 2026
Overview
Three specialized agent profiles have been configured for different types of tasks. Each agent has its own skills, system prompt, and best practices built-in.
Available Agents
| Agent ID | Name | Emoji | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
ios-dev |
iOS Developer | 📱 | iOS/Swift/SwiftUI development |
web-dev |
Web Developer | 🌐 | Next.js/React/TypeScript development |
research |
Research Assistant | 🔍 | Research, analysis, compilation |
iOS Developer (ios-dev)
Best for: iOS app development, SwiftUI, Swift, Xcode projects
Auto-loaded Skills:
- ios-26-role
- swiftui-expert-skill
- swift-clean-architecture
- swift-model-design
- swiftui-mvvm
- ios-project-structure
Default Patterns:
- Modern Swift concurrency (async/await)
- SwiftUI preferred over UIKit
- MVVM with @Observable
- iOS 26+ target
- Proper error handling & accessibility
- Unit tests for business logic
Usage:
# Switch to iOS agent
openclaw agents switch ios-dev
# Or spawn subagent for iOS task
# (In code: sessions_spawn with agentId: "ios-dev")
Web Developer (web-dev)
Best for: Next.js, React, TypeScript, web apps
Auto-loaded Skills:
- nextjs-expert
- frontend-design
- shadcn-ui
- ui-ux-pro-max
- firebase-basics
- firebase-auth-basics
- firebase-firestore-basics
Default Patterns:
- Next.js App Router
- TypeScript with strict typing
- Tailwind CSS for styling
- Responsive design
- Component composition
- Error boundaries & loading states
- Semantic HTML & accessibility
- Supabase for backend/database (preferred)
- Shared Supabase pattern for all Vercel apps (same project, prefixed tables)
- Supabase SSR auth patterns
- Server components for data fetching
- Proper RLS policies
- Service role key only in API routes
Shared Supabase Pattern (IMPORTANT):
All Vercel-deployed web apps share the same Supabase project (qnatchrjlpehiijwtreh):
- Copy
.env.localfrom existing project (blog-backup or gantt-board) - Table naming: MUST use
<projectName>_tableNameformat - Examples:
blog_messages,mission-control_tasks,heartbeat-status - This prevents table name collisions across apps
- Auth is shared (same users table across all apps)
Usage:
# Switch to web agent
openclaw agents switch web-dev
# Or spawn subagent for web task
# (In code: sessions_spawn with agentId: "web-dev")
Research Assistant (research)
Best for: Research tasks, information gathering, documentation
Auto-loaded Skills:
- browser-automation
- session-logs
Default Patterns:
- Web search for current info
- Multiple source verification
- Proper citation with URLs
- Well-structured markdown output
- Attribution sections
- Effective summarization
Usage:
# Spawn subagent for research
# (In code: sessions_spawn with agentId: "research")
How to Use
1. Interactive Mode
Switch which agent you're talking to:
openclaw agents switch ios-dev
openclaw agents switch web-dev
openclaw agents switch research
openclaw agents switch main # Back to default
2. Subagent Tasks
When spawning tasks, specify the right agent:
{
"agentId": "ios-dev",
"task": "Build a SwiftUI todo app with..."
}
{
"agentId": "web-dev",
"task": "Create a Next.js dashboard with..."
}
{
"agentId": "research",
"task": "Research the latest React patterns..."
}
3. From Main Agent
When I'm (Max) handling your requests, I can spawn the right specialist:
iOS Task:
User: "Build me a habit tracker app"
→ I spawn ios-dev subagent
→ It follows iOS skills automatically
→ Returns properly architected SwiftUI code
Web Task:
User: "Create a landing page"
→ I spawn web-dev subagent
→ It follows Next.js patterns from skills
→ Returns properly structured React components
Research Task:
User: "Find OpenClaw best practices"
→ I spawn research subagent
→ It searches, compiles, cites sources
→ Returns markdown document with attributions
Agent Workspace Structure
Each agent has its own workspace folder with domain-specific guidance:
~/.openclaw/agents/<agentId>/
├── agent/
│ └── agent.json # Agent configuration (model, skills, rules)
└── workspace/
└── AGENTS.md # Domain-specific workflow and patterns
Key Files
| File | Purpose |
|---|---|
agent/agent.json |
Configuration: model, system prompt, auto-loaded skills, rules |
workspace/AGENTS.md |
Domain workflow: patterns, file structure, common tasks, examples |
Why AGENTS.md Matters
The AGENTS.md in each agent's workspace provides:
- Standard workflow for that domain
- File organization patterns
- Code examples and templates
- Common tasks with step-by-step guides
- Tool-specific patterns (Supabase, Xcode, etc.)
When a subagent spawns, it reads its AGENTS.md to understand:
- How to structure the work
- What patterns to follow
- What skills to check
- How to deliver results
Benefits
- Specialized Knowledge - Each agent loads relevant skills automatically
- Consistent Patterns - iOS agent doesn't use web patterns, and vice versa
- Better Results - Domain-specific expertise in each area
- Parallel Work - Can spawn multiple specialized agents simultaneously
Configuration Files
Agent configs stored at:
~/.openclaw/agents/ios-dev/agent/agent.json~/.openclaw/agents/web-dev/agent/agent.json~/.openclaw/agents/research/agent/agent.json
Main config: ~/.openclaw/openclaw.json
Future Agents
Potential additional agents to create:
devops- Infrastructure, Docker, CI/CDdata- Python, data analysis, MLdesign- UI/UX, Figma, design systemsdocs- Technical writing, documentation
Just create a new ~/.openclaw/agents/<name>/agent/agent.json and register in openclaw.json.