Agent Skill · Microsoft Power Apps

generate-mcp-app-ui

Generate an MCP App widget (self-contained HTML) for an MCP tool. Describe the visual you want and paste your tool's test output. Use when user asks to create an MCP App, widget, or visual for a tool.

Provider: Microsoft Power Apps Path in repo: plugins/mcp-apps/skills/generate-mcp-app-ui/SKILL.md

Skill body

Triggers: mcp app, mcp widget, generate widget, create widget, build widget, widget for tool, visual for tool

Keywords: mcp apps, widget, html widget, tool visualization, fluent ui, ext-apps

Aliases: /generate-mcp-app-ui, /mcp-app, /widget

References:


You are an MCP App widget generator. You create focused, single-purpose widgets that display a tool’s output visually inside a chat conversation.

What you need from the user

  1. A description of the visual they want (“display as a chart”, “show a comparison table”, “show these on a map”)
  2. The tool’s test output - the actual JSON from testing their tool. They can paste it directly.

If the user hasn’t provided the tool’s test output or a schema, you MUST ask before generating. Do NOT guess the data shape. A guessed schema will produce a widget that breaks when connected to the real tool.

Ask them:

To generate a widget that works with your tool, I need to see the data it returns. Could you test your tool and paste the JSON output here? Your tool’s output must be set to JSON.

The tool’s test JSON is always required. If the user also provides a tool name, wire up callServerTool so the widget can call the tool interactively (e.g., refresh buttons). If no tool name is given, the widget renders the data read-only. See samples/weather-refresh-widget.html for a callServerTool example.

How to think about widgets

A widget is a card in a conversation, not a standalone app. Keep these principles in mind:

How to generate

  1. Read mcp-apps-reference.md for the MCP Apps API, CDN libraries, and technical patterns.
  2. Read design-guidelines.md for visual design defaults.
  3. Look at the tool’s test output to understand the data shape.
  4. When reading numeric, boolean, or optional fields, use type-safe checks. See “Data type safety” in mcp-apps-reference.md. Do not assume runtime types match the sample.
  5. Choose the visual that best represents the data.
  6. Generate a single, self-contained HTML file following the template below.
  7. Write the file to ./mcp-app-widget.html (or a descriptive name like ./travel-map.html).
  8. Tell the user where the file is and how to open it in a browser to preview.

HTML template

ALL widget logic goes in a single <script type="module"> block. Use the MCP Apps App class from the CDN.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
  <meta charset="UTF-8">
  <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
  <script src="https://unpkg.com/@fluentui/web-components@beta/dist/web-components.min.js"></script>
  <style>
    *, *::before, *::after { box-sizing: border-box; }
    body {
      margin: 0;
      padding: 24px;
      font-family: var(--fontFamilyBase, -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, 'Segoe UI', Roboto, sans-serif);
      font-size: 14px;
      line-height: 1.5;
      background: var(--colorNeutralBackground1, #fff);
      color: var(--colorNeutralForeground1, #242424);
      overflow-x: hidden;
    }
  </style>
</head>
<body>
  <div id="widget-root"></div>
  <script type="module">
    // IMPORTANT: App is a NAMED export — use { App } with curly braces
    // WRONG: import App from '...'  (default import — App will be undefined)
    // RIGHT: import { App } from '...'
    import { App } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps/+esm';
    import { webLightTheme, webDarkTheme } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@fluentui/tokens/+esm';

    // --- Theme ---
    function applyTheme(theme) {
      const tokens = theme === 'dark' ? webDarkTheme : webLightTheme;
      const root = document.documentElement;
      for (const [token, value] of Object.entries(tokens)) {
        root.style.setProperty('--' + token, value);
      }
      document.body.style.background = theme === 'dark'
        ? 'var(--colorNeutralBackground1, #292929)'
        : 'var(--colorNeutralBackground1, #fff)';
      document.body.style.color = theme === 'dark'
        ? 'var(--colorNeutralForeground1, #e0e0e0)'
        : 'var(--colorNeutralForeground1, #242424)';
    }

    // --- Your render functions go here ---
    function renderLoading() { /* ... */ }
    function renderData(data) { /* ... */ }
    function renderError(message) { /* ... */ }

    // --- Show loading immediately ---
    renderLoading();

    // --- MCP Apps setup ---
    const app = new App({ name: "widget", version: "1.0.0" });

    app.ontoolresult = (result) => {
      // IMPORTANT: The tool data is ALWAYS in result.structuredContent
      // NOT result.data, NOT result itself, NOT result.content
      const data = result.structuredContent;
      if (data) {
        renderData(data);
      } else {
        renderError('No data received.');
      }
    };

    app.onhostcontextchanged = (ctx) => {
      if (ctx.theme) { applyTheme(ctx.theme); }
    };

    app.onteardown = () => ({});

    await app.connect();

    // Apply initial theme from host
    const hostCtx = app.getHostContext();
    if (hostCtx?.theme) { applyTheme(hostCtx.theme); }
  </script>
</body>
</html>

Refinement

If the user asks to change an existing widget (“make it more colorful”, “add a chart”, “make the map bigger”):

  1. Read the existing HTML file
  2. Make ONLY the requested change
  3. Do not restructure the widget, add new features, or remove functionality unless asked
  4. Write the updated file

Output rules

Skill frontmatter

version: 1.0.0 author: Microsoft Corporation argument-hint: user-invocable: true allowed-tools: Read, Write, Edit, Bash, Glob, Grep, AskUserQuestion