7.5 KiB
7.5 KiB
description, argument-hint
| description | argument-hint |
|---|---|
| Create well-formatted commits with conventional commit messages and emoji | Optional flags like --no-verify to skip pre-commit checks |
Claude Command: Commit
This command helps you create well-formatted commits with conventional commit messages and emoji.
Usage
To create a commit, just type:
/commit
Or with options:
/commit --no-verify
What This Command Does
- Unless specified with
--no-verify, automatically runs pre-commit checks likepnpm lintor simular depending on the project language. - Checks which files are staged with
git status - If 0 files are staged, automatically adds all modified and new files with
git add - Performs a
git diffto understand what changes are being committed - Analyzes the diff to determine if multiple distinct logical changes are present
- If multiple distinct changes are detected, suggests breaking the commit into multiple smaller commits
- For each commit (or the single commit if not split), creates a commit message using emoji conventional commit format
Best Practices for Commits
- Verify before committing: Ensure code is linted, builds correctly, and documentation is updated
- Atomic commits: Each commit should contain related changes that serve a single purpose
- Split large changes: If changes touch multiple concerns, split them into separate commits
- Conventional commit format: Use the format
<type>: <description>where type is one of:feat: A new featurefix: A bug fixdocs: Documentation changesstyle: Code style changes (formatting, etc)refactor: Code changes that neither fix bugs nor add featuresperf: Performance improvementstest: Adding or fixing testschore: Changes to the build process, tools, etc.
- Present tense, imperative mood: Write commit messages as commands (e.g., "add feature" not "added feature")
- Concise first line: Keep the first line under 72 characters
- Emoji: Each commit type is paired with an appropriate emoji:
- ✨
feat: New feature - 🐛
fix: Bug fix - 📝
docs: Documentation - 💄
style: Formatting/style - ♻️
refactor: Code refactoring - ⚡️
perf: Performance improvements - ✅
test: Tests - 🔧
chore: Tooling, configuration - 🚀
ci: CI/CD improvements - 🗑️
revert: Reverting changes - 🧪
test: Add a failing test - 🚨
fix: Fix compiler/linter warnings - 🔒️
fix: Fix security issues - 👥
chore: Add or update contributors - 🚚
refactor: Move or rename resources - 🏗️
refactor: Make architectural changes - 🔀
chore: Merge branches - 📦️
chore: Add or update compiled files or packages - ➕
chore: Add a dependency - ➖
chore: Remove a dependency - 🌱
chore: Add or update seed files - 🧑💻
chore: Improve developer experience - 🧵
feat: Add or update code related to multithreading or concurrency - 🔍️
feat: Improve SEO - 🏷️
feat: Add or update types - 💬
feat: Add or update text and literals - 🌐
feat: Internationalization and localization - 👔
feat: Add or update business logic - 📱
feat: Work on responsive design - 🚸
feat: Improve user experience / usability - 🩹
fix: Simple fix for a non-critical issue - 🥅
fix: Catch errors - 👽️
fix: Update code due to external API changes - 🔥
fix: Remove code or files - 🎨
style: Improve structure/format of the code - 🚑️
fix: Critical hotfix - 🎉
chore: Begin a project - 🔖
chore: Release/Version tags - 🚧
wip: Work in progress - 💚
fix: Fix CI build - 📌
chore: Pin dependencies to specific versions - 👷
ci: Add or update CI build system - 📈
feat: Add or update analytics or tracking code - ✏️
fix: Fix typos - ⏪️
revert: Revert changes - 📄
chore: Add or update license - 💥
feat: Introduce breaking changes - 🍱
assets: Add or update assets - ♿️
feat: Improve accessibility - 💡
docs: Add or update comments in source code - 🗃️
db: Perform database related changes - 🔊
feat: Add or update logs - 🔇
fix: Remove logs - 🤡
test: Mock things - 🥚
feat: Add or update an easter egg - 🙈
chore: Add or update .gitignore file - 📸
test: Add or update snapshots - ⚗️
experiment: Perform experiments - 🚩
feat: Add, update, or remove feature flags - 💫
ui: Add or update animations and transitions - ⚰️
refactor: Remove dead code - 🦺
feat: Add or update code related to validation - ✈️
feat: Improve offline support
- ✨
Guidelines for Splitting Commits
When analyzing the diff, consider splitting commits based on these criteria:
- Different concerns: Changes to unrelated parts of the codebase
- Different types of changes: Mixing features, fixes, refactoring, etc.
- File patterns: Changes to different types of files (e.g., source code vs documentation)
- Logical grouping: Changes that would be easier to understand or review separately
- Size: Very large changes that would be clearer if broken down
Examples
Good commit messages:
- ✨ feat: add user authentication system
- 🐛 fix: resolve memory leak in rendering process
- 📝 docs: update API documentation with new endpoints
- ♻️ refactor: simplify error handling logic in parser
- 🚨 fix: resolve linter warnings in component files
- 🧑💻 chore: improve developer tooling setup process
- 👔 feat: implement business logic for transaction validation
- 🩹 fix: address minor styling inconsistency in header
- 🚑️ fix: patch critical security vulnerability in auth flow
- 🎨 style: reorganize component structure for better readability
- 🔥 fix: remove deprecated legacy code
- 🦺 feat: add input validation for user registration form
- 💚 fix: resolve failing CI pipeline tests
- 📈 feat: implement analytics tracking for user engagement
- 🔒️ fix: strengthen authentication password requirements
- ♿️ feat: improve form accessibility for screen readers
Example of splitting commits:
- First commit: ✨ feat: add new solc version type definitions
- Second commit: 📝 docs: update documentation for new solc versions
- Third commit: 🔧 chore: update package.json dependencies
- Fourth commit: 🏷️ feat: add type definitions for new API endpoints
- Fifth commit: 🧵 feat: improve concurrency handling in worker threads
- Sixth commit: 🚨 fix: resolve linting issues in new code
- Seventh commit: ✅ test: add unit tests for new solc version features
- Eighth commit: 🔒️ fix: update dependencies with security vulnerabilities
Command Options
--no-verify: Skip running the pre-commit checks (lint, build, generate:docs)
Important Notes
- By default, pre-commit checks (
pnpm lint,pnpm build,pnpm generate:docs) will run to ensure code quality - If these checks fail, you'll be asked if you want to proceed with the commit anyway or fix the issues first
- If specific files are already staged, the command will only commit those files
- If no files are staged, it will automatically stage all modified and new files
- The commit message will be constructed based on the changes detected
- Before committing, the command will review the diff to identify if multiple commits would be more appropriate
- If suggesting multiple commits, it will help you stage and commit the changes separately
- Always reviews the commit diff to ensure the message matches the changes