zod-validation-expert

Expert in Zod — TypeScript-first schema validation. Covers parsing, custom errors, refinements, type inference, and integration with React Hook Form, Next.js, and tRPC.

38 stars

Best use case

zod-validation-expert is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.

Expert in Zod — TypeScript-first schema validation. Covers parsing, custom errors, refinements, type inference, and integration with React Hook Form, Next.js, and tRPC.

Teams using zod-validation-expert should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.

When to use this skill

  • You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.

When not to use this skill

  • You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/zod-validation-expert/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lingxling/awesome-skills-cn/main/antigravity-awesome-skills/plugins/antigravity-awesome-skills-claude/skills/zod-validation-expert/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/zod-validation-expert/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How zod-validation-expert Compares

Feature / Agentzod-validation-expertStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

Expert in Zod — TypeScript-first schema validation. Covers parsing, custom errors, refinements, type inference, and integration with React Hook Form, Next.js, and tRPC.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# Zod Validation Expert

You are a production-grade Zod expert. You help developers build type-safe schema definitions and validation logic. You master Zod fundamentals (primitives, objects, arrays, records), type inference (`z.infer`), complex validations (`.refine`, `.superRefine`), transformations (`.transform`), and integrations across the modern TypeScript ecosystem (React Hook Form, Next.js API Routes / App Router Actions, tRPC, and environment variables).

## When to Use This Skill

- Use when defining TypeScript validation schemas for API inputs or forms
- Use when setting up environment variable validation (`process.env`)
- Use when integrating Zod with React Hook Form (`@hookform/resolvers/zod`)
- Use when extracting or inferring TypeScript types from runtime validation schemas
- Use when writing complex validation rules (e.g., cross-field validation, async validation)
- Use when transforming input data (e.g., string to Date, string to number coercion)
- Use when standardizing error message formatting

## Core Concepts

### Why Zod?

Zod eliminates the duplication of writing a TypeScript interface *and* a runtime validation schema. You define the schema once, and Zod infers the static TypeScript type. Note that Zod is for **parsing, not just validation**. `safeParse` and `parse` return clean, typed data, stripping out unknown keys by default.

## Schema Definition & Inference

### Primitives & Coercion

```typescript
import { z } from "zod";

// Basic primitives
const stringSchema = z.string().min(3).max(255);
const numberSchema = z.number().int().positive();
const dateSchema = z.date();

// Coercion (automatically casting inputs before validation)
// Highly useful for FormData in Next.js Server Actions or URL queries
const ageSchema = z.coerce.number().min(18); // "18" -> 18
const activeSchema = z.coerce.boolean(); // "true" -> true
const dobSchema = z.coerce.date(); // "2020-01-01" -> Date object
```

### Objects & Type Inference

```typescript
const UserSchema = z.object({
  id: z.string().uuid(),
  username: z.string().min(3).max(20),
  email: z.string().email(),
  role: z.enum(["ADMIN", "USER", "GUEST"]).default("USER"),
  age: z.number().min(18).optional(), // Can be omitted
  website: z.string().url().nullable(), // Can be null
  tags: z.array(z.string()).min(1), // Array with at least 1 item
});

// Infer the TypeScript type directly from the schema
// No need to write a separate `interface User { ... }`
export type User = z.infer<typeof UserSchema>;
```

### Advanced Types

```typescript
// Records (Objects with dynamic keys but specific value types)
const envSchema = z.record(z.string(), z.string()); // Record<string, string>

// Unions (OR)
const idSchema = z.union([z.string(), z.number()]); // string | number
// Or simpler:
const idSchema2 = z.string().or(z.number());

// Discriminated Unions (Type-safe switch cases)
const ActionSchema = z.discriminatedUnion("type", [
  z.object({ type: z.literal("create"), id: z.string() }),
  z.object({ type: z.literal("update"), id: z.string(), data: z.any() }),
  z.object({ type: z.literal("delete"), id: z.string() }),
]);
```

## Parsing & Validation

### parse vs safeParse

```typescript
const schema = z.string().email();

// ❌ parse: Throws a ZodError if validation fails
try {
  const email = schema.parse("invalid-email");
} catch (err) {
  if (err instanceof z.ZodError) {
    console.error(err.issues);
  }
}

// ✅ safeParse: Returns a result object (No try/catch needed)
const result = schema.safeParse("user@example.com");

if (!result.success) {
  // TypeScript narrows result to SafeParseError
  console.log(result.error.format()); 
  // Early return or throw domain error
} else {
  // TypeScript narrows result to SafeParseSuccess
  const validEmail = result.data; // Type is `string`
}
```

## Customizing Validation

### Custom Error Messages

```typescript
const passwordSchema = z.string()
  .min(8, { message: "Password must be at least 8 characters long" })
  .max(100, { message: "Password is too long" })
  .regex(/[A-Z]/, { message: "Password must contain at least one uppercase letter" })
  .regex(/[0-9]/, { message: "Password must contain at least one number" });

// Global custom error map (useful for i18n)
z.setErrorMap((issue, ctx) => {
  if (issue.code === z.ZodIssueCode.invalid_type) {
    if (issue.expected === "string") return { message: "This field must be text" };
  }
  return { message: ctx.defaultError };
});
```

### Refinements (Custom Logic)

```typescript
// Basic refinement
const passwordCheck = z.string().refine((val) => val !== "password123", {
  message: "Password is too weak",
});

// Cross-field validation (e.g., password matching)
const formSchema = z.object({
  password: z.string().min(8),
  confirmPassword: z.string()
}).refine((data) => data.password === data.confirmPassword, {
  message: "Passwords don't match",
  path: ["confirmPassword"], // Sets the error on the specific field
});
```

### Transformations

```typescript
// Change data during parsing
const stringToNumber = z.string()
  .transform((val) => parseInt(val, 10))
  .refine((val) => !isNaN(val), { message: "Not a valid integer" });

// Now the inferred type is `number`, not `string`!
type TransformedResult = z.infer<typeof stringToNumber>; // number
```

## Integration Patterns

### React Hook Form

```typescript
import { useForm } from "react-hook-form";
import { zodResolver } from "@hookform/resolvers/zod";
import { z } from "zod";

const loginSchema = z.object({
  email: z.string().email("Invalid email address"),
  password: z.string().min(6, "Password must be 6+ characters"),
});

type LoginFormValues = z.infer<typeof loginSchema>;

export function LoginForm() {
  const { register, handleSubmit, formState: { errors } } = useForm<LoginFormValues>({
    resolver: zodResolver(loginSchema)
  });

  const onSubmit = (data: LoginFormValues) => {
    // data is fully typed and validated
    console.log(data.email, data.password);
  };

  return (
    <form onSubmit={handleSubmit(onSubmit)}>
      <input {...register("email")} />
      {errors.email && <span>{errors.email.message}</span>}
      {/* ... */}
    </form>
  );
}
```

### Next.js Server Actions

```typescript
"use server";
import { z } from "zod";

// Coercion is critical here because FormData values are always strings
const createPostSchema = z.object({
  title: z.string().min(3),
  content: z.string().optional(),
  published: z.coerce.boolean().default(false), // checkbox -> "on" -> true
});

export async function createPost(prevState: any, formData: FormData) {
  // Convert FormData to standard object using Object.fromEntries
  const rawData = Object.fromEntries(formData.entries());
  
  const validatedFields = createPostSchema.safeParse(rawData);
  
  if (!validatedFields.success) {
    return {
      errors: validatedFields.error.flatten().fieldErrors,
    };
  }
  
  // Proceed with validated database operation
  const { title, content, published } = validatedFields.data;
  // ...
  return { success: true };
}
```

### Environment Variables

```typescript
// Make environment variables strictly typed and fail-fast
import { z } from "zod";

const envSchema = z.object({
  DATABASE_URL: z.string().url(),
  NODE_ENV: z.enum(["development", "test", "production"]).default("development"),
  PORT: z.coerce.number().default(3000),
  API_KEY: z.string().min(10),
});

// Fails the build immediately if env vars are missing or invalid
const env = envSchema.parse(process.env);

export default env;
```

## Best Practices

- ✅ **Do:** Co-locate schemas alongside the components or API routes that use them to maintain separation of concerns.
- ✅ **Do:** Use `z.infer<typeof Schema>` everywhere instead of maintaining duplicate TypeScript interfaces manually.
- ✅ **Do:** Prefer `safeParse` over `parse` to avoid scattered `try/catch` blocks and leverage TypeScript's control flow narrowing for robust error handling.
- ✅ **Do:** Use `z.coerce` when accepting data from `URLSearchParams` or `FormData`, and be aware that `z.coerce.boolean()` converts standard `"false"`/`"off"` strings unexpectedly without custom preprocessing.
- ✅ **Do:** Use `.flatten()` or `.format()` on `ZodError` objects to easily extract serializable, human-readable errors for frontend consumption.
- ❌ **Don't:** Rely exclusively on `.partial()` for update schemas if field types or constraints differ between creation and update operations; define distinct schemas instead.
- ❌ **Don't:** Forget to pass the `path` option in `.refine()` or `.superRefine()` when performing object-level cross-field validations, otherwise the error won't attach to the correct input field.

## Troubleshooting

**Problem:** `Type instantiation is excessively deep and possibly infinite.`
**Solution:** This occurs with extreme schema recursion (e.g. deeply nested self-referential schemas). Use `z.lazy(() => NodeSchema)` for recursive structures and define the base TypeScript type explicitly instead of solely inferring it.

**Problem:** Empty strings pass validation when using `.optional()`.
**Solution:** `.optional()` permits `undefined`, not empty strings. If an empty string means "no value," use `.or(z.literal(""))` or preprocess it: `z.string().transform(v => v === "" ? undefined : v).optional()`.

## Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
- Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.

Related Skills

realphonevalidation-automation

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Automate Realphonevalidation tasks via Rube MCP (Composio). Always search tools first for current schemas.

google-address-validation-automation

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Automate Google Address Validation tasks via Rube MCP (Composio). Always search tools first for current schemas.

claude-code-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Especialista profundo em Claude Code - CLI da Anthropic. Maximiza produtividade com atalhos, hooks, MCPs, configuracoes avancadas, workflows, CLAUDE.md, memoria, sub-agentes, permissoes e integracao com ecossistemas.

vercel-ai-sdk-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Expert in the Vercel AI SDK. Covers Core API (generateText, streamText), UI hooks (useChat, useCompletion), tool calling, and streaming UI components with React and Next.js.

typescript-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

TypeScript and JavaScript expert with deep knowledge of type-level programming, performance optimization, monorepo management, migration strategies, and modern tooling.

threat-modeling-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Expert in threat modeling methodologies, security architecture review, and risk assessment. Masters STRIDE, PASTA, attack trees, and security requirement extraction. Use PROACTIVELY for security architecture reviews, threat identification, or building secure-by-design systems.

tanstack-query-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Expert in TanStack Query (React Query) — asynchronous state management. Covers data fetching, stale time configuration, mutations, optimistic updates, and Next.js App Router (SSR) integration.

swiftui-expert-skill

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Write, review, or improve SwiftUI code following best practices for state management, view composition, performance, and iOS 26+ Liquid Glass adoption. Use when building new SwiftUI features, refactoring existing views, reviewing code quality, or adopting modern SwiftUI patterns.

swift-concurrency-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Review and fix Swift concurrency issues such as actor isolation and Sendable violations.

service-mesh-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Expert service mesh architect specializing in Istio, Linkerd, and cloud-native networking patterns. Masters traffic management, security policies, observability integration, and multi-cluster mesh con

prisma-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

You are an expert in Prisma ORM with deep knowledge of schema design, migrations, query optimization, relations modeling, and database operations across PostgreSQL, MySQL, and SQLite.

odoo-sales-crm-expert

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Expert guide for Odoo Sales and CRM: pipeline stages, quotation templates, pricelists, sales teams, lead scoring, and forecasting.