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commit-work

majiayu000
Updated 2 days ago
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Metageneral

About

The commit-work skill helps developers create high-quality git commits by reviewing and staging changes, splitting work into logical commits, and writing clear Conventional Commit messages. Use it when you need to commit changes, craft commit messages, stage files, or split work into multiple commits. It ensures commits contain only intended changes with proper scoping and descriptive messages.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Plugin CommandRecommended
/plugin add https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry.git ~/.claude/skills/commit-work

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

Documentation

Commit work

Goal

Make commits that are easy to review and safe to ship:

  • only intended changes are included
  • commits are logically scoped (split when needed)
  • commit messages describe what changed and why

Inputs to ask for (if missing)

  • Single commit or multiple commits? (If unsure: default to multiple small commits when there are unrelated changes.)
  • Commit style: Conventional Commits are required.
  • Any rules: max subject length, required scopes.

Workflow (checklist)

  1. Inspect the working tree before staging
    • git status
    • git diff (unstaged)
    • If many changes: git diff --stat
  2. Decide commit boundaries (split if needed)
    • Split by: feature vs refactor, backend vs frontend, formatting vs logic, tests vs prod code, dependency bumps vs behavior changes.
    • If changes are mixed in one file, plan to use patch staging.
  3. Stage only what belongs in the next commit
    • Prefer patch staging for mixed changes: git add -p
    • To unstage a hunk/file: git restore --staged -p or git restore --staged <path>
    • If the commit is whole-file (no partial hunks), prefer the committer helper:
      • committer.ps1 "type(scope): summary" path1 path2 ...
        • If script execution is blocked, run: pwsh -File committer.ps1 "type(scope): summary" path1 path2 ...
      • It clears the index and stages exactly the files you list (never use .).
      • Use --force only if git reports a stale .git/index.lock.
      • Skip it when you need partial hunks or a multi-line commit message body.
  4. Review what will actually be committed
    • git diff --cached
    • Sanity checks:
      • no secrets or tokens
      • no accidental debug logging
      • no unrelated formatting churn
  5. Describe the staged change in 1-2 sentences (before writing the message)
    • "What changed?" + "Why?"
    • If you cannot describe it cleanly, the commit is probably too big or mixed; go back to step 2.
  6. Write the commit message
    • Use Conventional Commits (required):
      • type(scope): short summary
      • blank line
      • body (what/why, not implementation diary)
      • footer (BREAKING CHANGE) if needed
    • Prefer an editor for multi-line messages: git commit -v
    • Use references/commit-message-template.md if helpful.
  7. Run the smallest relevant verification
    • Run the repo's fastest meaningful check (unit tests, lint, or build) before moving on.
  8. Repeat for the next commit until the working tree is clean

Deliverable

Provide:

  • the final commit message(s)
  • a short summary per commit (what/why)
  • the commands used to stage/review (at minimum: git diff --cached, plus any tests run)

GitHub Repository

majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
Path: skills/commit-work

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