name: commit type: workflow description: "Creates a well-formed git commit following conventional commit format with type, scope, and descriptive message. Use when the user is ready to commit changes or mentions conventional commits." context: fork agent: lead-programmer effort: 1 allowed-tools: Read, Glob, Grep, Write, Bash argument-hint: "[commit message or empty for auto-generate]" user-invocable: true when_to_use: "When creating git commits or asked to save/commit changes"
Conventional Commit Messages
Follow these conventions when creating commits for this project.
Prerequisites
Before committing, always check the current branch:
git branch --show-current
If you're on main or master, confirm with the user before committing directly — it is usually better to commit on a feature branch. Do not create a branch without user confirmation.
Before claiming the change is ready to commit, use
verification-before-completion:
- Identify the exact readiness claim for the commit.
- Run the relevant project checks, or state exactly why they cannot be run.
- Inspect
git diff --stat/ changed files so the commit scope is known. - Do not say "ready to commit" if verification is partial or failed.
Format
<type>(<scope>): <subject>
<body>
<footer>
The header is required. Scope is optional. All lines must stay under 100 characters.
Commit Types
| Type | Purpose |
|---|---|
feat | New feature |
fix | Bug fix |
ref | Refactoring (no behavior change) |
perf | Performance improvement |
docs | Documentation only |
test | Test additions or corrections |
build | Build system or dependencies |
ci | CI configuration |
chore | Maintenance tasks |
style | Code formatting (no logic change) |
meta | Repository metadata |
license | License changes |
Subject Line Rules
- Use imperative, present tense: "Add feature" not "Added feature"
- Capitalize the first letter
- No period at the end
- Maximum 70 characters
Body Guidelines
- Explain what and why, not how
- Use imperative mood and present tense
- Include motivation for the change
- Contrast with previous behavior when relevant
Footer: Issue References
Reference issues in the footer using these patterns:
Fixes #1234
Refs #1234
Refs LINEAR-ABC-123
Fixescloses the issue when mergedRefslinks without closing
AI-Generated Changes
When changes were primarily generated by a coding agent (like Claude Code), include the Co-Authored-By attribution in the commit footer:
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
This is the only indicator of AI involvement that should appear in commits. Do not add phrases like "Generated by AI", "Written with Claude", or similar markers in the subject, body, or anywhere else in the commit message.
Examples
Simple fix
fix(api): Handle null response in user endpoint
The user API could return null for deleted accounts, causing a crash
in the dashboard. Add null check before accessing user properties.
Fixes #5678
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Feature with scope
feat(alerts): Add Slack thread replies for alert updates
When an alert is updated or resolved, post a reply to the original
Slack thread instead of creating a new message. This keeps related
notifications grouped together.
Refs GH-1234
Refactor
ref: Extract common validation logic to shared module
Move duplicate validation code from three endpoints into a shared
validator class. No behavior change.
Breaking change
feat(api)!: Remove deprecated v1 endpoints
Remove all v1 API endpoints that were deprecated in version 23.1.
Clients should migrate to v2 endpoints.
BREAKING CHANGE: v1 endpoints no longer available
Fixes #9999
Revert Format
revert: feat(api): Add new endpoint
This reverts commit abc123def456.
Reason: Caused performance regression in production.
Principles
- Each commit should be a single, stable change
- Commits should be independently reviewable
- The repository should be in a working state after each commit
References
Related Skills
verification-before-completion- Required before commit readiness claims.
When to Use
- Use when ALWAYS use this skill when committing code changes — never commit directly without it. Creates commits with proper conventional commit format and issue references. Trigger on any commit, git commit, save changes, or commit message task.