Generates Sorbet type signatures in separate RBI files from Ruby source files. Triggers when creating type definitions, adding types to Ruby code, or generating .rbi files for classes/modules without existing Sorbet signatures.
Content & Writing
85 Stars
2 Forks
Updated Jan 19, 2026, 04:39 AM
Why Use This
This skill provides specialized capabilities for aiskillstore's codebase.
Use Cases
Developing new features in the aiskillstore repository
Refactoring existing code to follow aiskillstore standards
Understanding and working with aiskillstore's codebase structure
---
name: generating-sorbet
description: Generates Sorbet type signatures in separate RBI files from Ruby source files. Triggers when creating type definitions, adding types to Ruby code, or generating .rbi files for classes/modules without existing Sorbet signatures.
---
# Sorbet RBI Generation Skill
Generate Sorbet type signatures in separate `.rbi` files. RBI files are used when you cannot or should not modify the original Ruby source - such as for gems, generated code, or legacy codebases.
# Instructions
When generating Sorbet RBI signatures, always follow these steps.
Copy this checklist and track your progress:
```
Sorbet RBI Generation Progress:
- [ ] Step 1: Analyze the Ruby source
- [ ] Step 2: Generate RBI files
- [ ] Step 3: Eliminate `T.untyped` in signatures
- [ ] Step 4: Review and refine signatures
- [ ] Step 5: Validate signatures with Sorbet
```
## Rules
- You MUST NOT run Ruby code of the project.
- You MUST NOT use `T.untyped`. Infer the proper type instead.
- You MUST NOT use `T.unsafe` - it bypasses type checking entirely.
- You MUST NOT use `T.cast` - it forces types without verification.
- You MUST ask the user to provide more details if something is not clear.
- You MUST prepend any command with `bundle exec` if the project has Gemfile.
- You MUST use `sig { }` block syntax for method signatures.
- You MUST add `extend T::Sig` to classes/modules before using `sig`.
- You MUST NOT add method bodies in RBI files - only signatures and empty method definitions.
- You MUST place RBI files in `./rbi` directory.
## 1. Analyze the Ruby Source
Always perform this step.
Read and understand the Ruby source file:
- Identify all classes, modules, methods, constants and instance variables.
- Note inheritance, module inclusion and definitions based on metaprogramming.
- Note visibility modifiers - `public`, `private`, `protected`.
- Note type parameters for generic classes.
## 2. Generate RBI Files
Always perform this step.
1. Determine the correct RBI directory:
Place RBI files in `./rbi` directory. Sorbet reads all `.rbi` files from this location.
RBI files are needed to describe code Sorbet cannot understand statically:
- Gem definitions
- Methods created with `define_method` or `method_missing`
- Constants from `const_get`/`const_set`
- Dynamic ancestors added via `extend`
- DSL-generated methods (Rails, ActiveRecord, etc.)
2. Create the RBI file with typed sigil:
```ruby
# typed: strict
```
3. Add `extend T::Sig` to each class/module:
```ruby
class MyClass
extend T::Sig
end
```
4. Add method stubs with signatures (no method bodies):
**Example - Ruby Source:**
```ruby
class User
attr_reader :name, :age
def initialize(name, age)
@name = name
@age = age
end
def greet(greeting)
"#{greeting}, #{@name}!"
end
end
```
**Example - RBI File (`rbi/user.rbi`):**
```ruby
# typed: strict
class User
extend T::Sig
sig { returns(String) }
attr_reader :name
sig { returns(Integer) }
attr_reader :age
sig { params(name: String, age: Integer).void }
def initialize(name, age); end
sig { params(greeting: String).returns(String) }
def greet(greeting); end
end
```
- RBI files mirror structure but contain only signatures and empty method stubs
- See [syntax.md](reference/syntax.md) for the full Sorbet RBI syntax guide
## 3. Eliminate `T.untyped` in Signatures
Always perform this step.
- Review all signatures and replace `T.untyped` with proper types.
- Use code context, method calls, and tests to infer types.
- Use `T.untyped` only as a last resort when type cannot be determined.
## 4. Review and Refine Signatures
Always perform this step.
- Verify signatures are correct, coherent, and complete.
- Remove unnecessary `T.untyped` types.
- Ensure all methods and attributes have signatures.
- Verify class hierarchy and module inclusions match the source.
- Fix any errors and repeat until signatures are correct.
## 5. Validate Signatures with Sorbet
Always perform this step.
Run Sorbet type checker to validate signatures:
```bash
srb tc
```
Or with bundle:
```bash
bundle exec srb tc
```
This checks:
- Signature syntax correctness
- Type consistency
- Method parameter/return type matching
- Class/module structure matching source
Fix any errors reported and repeat until validation passes.
# References
- [syntax.md](reference/syntax.md) - Sorbet RBI syntax guide
- [references/](reference/references/STRUCTURE.md) - Real-world RBI examples from stripe-ruby
- [Sorbet RBI documentation](https://sorbet.org/docs/rbi) - Official RBI docs