How to install wp-block-development
npx skills add https://github.com/wordpress/agent-skills --skill wp-block-developmentFull instructions (SKILL.md)
Source of truth, from wordpress/agent-skills.
name: wp-block-development description: "Use when developing WordPress (Gutenberg) blocks: block.json metadata, register_block_type(_from_metadata), attributes/serialization, supports, dynamic rendering (render.php/render_callback), deprecations/migrations, viewScript vs viewScriptModule, and @wordpress/scripts/@wordpress/create-block build and test workflows." compatibility: "Targets WordPress 6.9+ (PHP 7.2.24+). Filesystem-based agent with bash + node. Some workflows require WP-CLI."
WP Block Development
When to use
Use this skill for block work such as:
- creating a new block, or updating an existing one
- changing
block.json(scripts/styles/supports/attributes/render/viewScriptModule) - fixing “block invalid / not saving / attributes not persisting”
- adding dynamic rendering (
render.php/render_callback) - block deprecations and migrations (
deprecatedversions) - build tooling for blocks (
@wordpress/scripts,@wordpress/create-block,wp-env)
Inputs required
- Repo root and target (plugin vs theme vs full site).
- The block name/namespace and where it lives (path to
block.jsonif known). - Target WordPress version range (especially if using modules /
viewScriptModule).
Procedure
0) Triage and locate blocks
- Run triage:
node skills/wp-project-triage/scripts/detect_wp_project.mjs
- List blocks (deterministic scan):
node skills/wp-block-development/scripts/list_blocks.mjs
- Identify the block root (directory containing
block.json) you’re changing.
If this repo is a full site (wp-content/ present), be explicit about which plugin/theme contains the block.
1) Create a new block (if needed)
If you are creating a new block, prefer scaffolding rather than hand-rolling structure:
- Use
@wordpress/create-blockto scaffold a modern block/plugin setup. - If you need Interactivity API from day 1, use the interactive template.
Read:
references/creating-new-blocks.md
After scaffolding:
- Re-run the block list script and confirm the new block root.
- Continue with the remaining steps (model choice, metadata, registration, serialization).
2) Ensure apiVersion 3 (WordPress 6.9+)
WordPress 6.9 enforces apiVersion: 3 in the block.json schema. Blocks with apiVersion 2 or lower trigger console warnings when SCRIPT_DEBUG is enabled.
Why this matters:
- WordPress 7.0 will run the post editor in an iframe regardless of block apiVersion.
- apiVersion 3 ensures your block works correctly inside the iframed editor (style isolation, viewport units, media queries).
Migration: Changing from version 2 to 3 is usually as simple as updating the apiVersion field in block.json. However:
- Test in a local environment with the iframe editor enabled.
- Ensure any style handles are included in
block.json(styles missing from the iframe won't apply). - Third-party scripts attached to a specific
windowmay have scoping issues.
Read:
references/block-json.md(apiVersion and schema details)
3) Pick the right block model
- Static block (markup saved into post content): implement
save(); keep attributes serialization stable. - Dynamic block (server-rendered): use
renderinblock.json(orrender_callbackin PHP) and keepsave()minimal ornull. - Interactive frontend behavior:
- Prefer
viewScriptModulefor modern module-based view scripts where supported. - If you're working primarily on
data-wp-*directives or stores, also usewp-interactivity-api.
- Prefer
4) Update block.json safely
Make changes in the block’s block.json, then confirm registration matches metadata.
For field-by-field guidance, read:
references/block-json.md
Common pitfalls:
- changing
namebreaks compatibility (treat it as stable API) - changing saved markup without adding
deprecatedcauses “Invalid block” - adding attributes without defining source/serialization correctly causes “attribute not saving”
5) Register the block (server-side preferred)
Prefer PHP registration using metadata, especially when:
- you need dynamic rendering
- you need translations (
wp_set_script_translations) - you need conditional asset loading
Read and apply:
references/registration.md
6) Implement edit/save/render patterns
Follow wrapper attribute best practices:
- Editor:
useBlockProps() - Static save:
useBlockProps.save() - Dynamic render (PHP):
get_block_wrapper_attributes()
Read:
references/supports-and-wrappers.mdreferences/dynamic-rendering.md(if dynamic)
7) Inner blocks (block composition)
If your block is a “container” that nests other blocks, treat Inner Blocks as a first-class feature:
- Use
useInnerBlocksProps()to integrate inner blocks with wrapper props. - Keep migrations in mind if you change inner markup.
Read:
references/inner-blocks.md
8) Attributes and serialization
Before changing attributes:
- confirm where the attribute value lives (comment delimiter vs HTML vs context)
- avoid the deprecated
metaattribute source
Read:
references/attributes-and-serialization.md
9) Migrations and deprecations (avoid "Invalid block")
If you change saved markup or attributes:
- Add a
deprecatedentry (newest → oldest). - Provide
savefor old versions and an optionalmigrateto normalize attributes.
Read:
references/deprecations.md
10) Tooling and verification commands
Prefer whatever the repo already uses:
@wordpress/scripts(common) → run existing npm scriptswp-env(common) → use for local WP + E2E
Read:
references/tooling-and-testing.md
Verification
- Block appears in inserter and inserts successfully.
- Saving + reloading does not create “Invalid block”.
- Frontend output matches expectations (static: saved markup; dynamic: server output).
- Assets load where expected (editor vs frontend).
- Run the repo’s lint/build/tests that triage recommends.
Failure modes / debugging
If something fails, start here:
references/debugging.md(common failures + fastest checks)references/attributes-and-serialization.md(attributes not saving)references/deprecations.md(invalid block after change)
Escalation
If you’re uncertain about upstream behavior/version support, consult canonical docs first:
- WordPress Developer Resources (Block Editor Handbook, Theme Handbook, Plugin Handbook)
- Gutenberg repo docs for bleeding-edge behaviors
Related skills
More from wordpress/agent-skills and the wider catalog.
wp-plugin-development
Use when developing WordPress plugins: architecture and hooks, activation/deactivation/uninstall, admin UI and Settings API, data storage, cron/tasks, security (nonces/capabilities/sanitization/escaping), and release packaging.
wp-rest-api
Use when building, extending, or debugging WordPress REST API endpoints/routes: register_rest_route, WP_REST_Controller/controller classes, schema/argument validation, permission_callback/authentication, response shaping, register_rest_field/register_meta, or exposing CPTs/taxonomies via show_in_rest.
wp-block-themes
Use when developing WordPress block themes: theme.json (global settings/styles), templates and template parts, patterns, style variations, and Site Editor troubleshooting (style hierarchy, overrides, caching).
wp-performance
Use when investigating or improving WordPress performance (backend-only agent): profiling and measurement (WP-CLI profile/doctor, Server-Timing, Query Monitor via REST headers), database/query optimization, autoloaded options, object caching, cron, HTTP API calls, and safe verification.
wordpress-router
Use when the user asks about WordPress codebases (plugins, themes, block themes, Gutenberg blocks, WP core checkouts) and you need to quickly classify the repo and route to the correct workflow/skill (blocks, theme.json, REST API, WP-CLI, performance, security, testing, release packaging).
wp-project-triage
Use when you need a deterministic inspection of a WordPress repository (plugin/theme/block theme/WP core/Gutenberg/full site) including tooling/tests/version hints, and a structured JSON report to guide workflows and guardrails.