git-commit-helper
Generate descriptive commit messages by analyzing git diffs. Use when the user asks for help writing commit messages or reviewing staged changes.
When & Why to Use This Skill
Git Commit Helper is a specialized Claude skill designed to automate the creation of professional and standardized git commit messages. By performing deep analysis of staged git diffs, it generates descriptive messages that follow the Conventional Commits specification. This tool solves the common problem of vague or inconsistent commit history, ensuring that every code change is documented with clarity, intent, and proper formatting to improve long-term project maintainability.
Use Cases
- Standardizing Team Workflows: Automatically enforce the Conventional Commits format (feat, fix, refactor, etc.) across a development team to ensure a uniform and searchable repository history.
- Summarizing Complex Diffs: Analyze large or multi-file staged changes to extract the most important modifications and generate a concise 'why' and 'what' for the commit body.
- Enhancing Code Review Readiness: Create clear, imperative-mood commit messages that help reviewers understand the context of changes before they even open a Pull Request.
- Educational Onboarding: Assist junior developers in learning industry-standard commit guidelines, such as using the imperative mood and keeping summaries under 50 characters.
- Automated Changelog Generation: Maintain a high-quality commit log that can be easily parsed by automated tools to generate user-facing changelogs and release notes.
| name | Git Commit Helper |
|---|---|
| description | Generate descriptive commit messages by analyzing git diffs. Use when the user asks for help writing commit messages or reviewing staged changes. |
| - matcher | "Bash" |
| - type | command |
| command | "echo \"[$(date)] Git Commit Helper: Analyzed git diff for commit message\" >> ~/.claude/git-commit-helper.log" |
Git Commit Helper
Quick start
Analyze staged changes and generate commit message:
# View staged changes
git diff --staged
# Generate commit message based on changes
# (Claude will analyze the diff and suggest a message)
Commit message format
Follow conventional commits format:
<type>(<scope>): <description>
[optional body]
[optional footer]
Types
- feat: New feature
- fix: Bug fix
- docs: Documentation changes
- style: Code style changes (formatting, missing semicolons)
- refactor: Code refactoring
- test: Adding or updating tests
- chore: Maintenance tasks
Examples
Feature commit:
feat(auth): add JWT authentication
Implement JWT-based authentication system with:
- Login endpoint with token generation
- Token validation middleware
- Refresh token support
Bug fix:
fix(api): handle null values in user profile
Prevent crashes when user profile fields are null.
Add null checks before accessing nested properties.
Refactor:
refactor(database): simplify query builder
Extract common query patterns into reusable functions.
Reduce code duplication in database layer.
Analyzing changes
Review what's being committed:
# Show files changed
git status
# Show detailed changes
git diff --staged
# Show statistics
git diff --staged --stat
# Show changes for specific file
git diff --staged path/to/file
Commit message guidelines
DO:
- Use imperative mood ("add feature" not "added feature")
- Keep first line under 50 characters
- Capitalize first letter
- No period at end of summary
- Explain WHY not just WHAT in body
DON'T:
- Use vague messages like "update" or "fix stuff"
- Include technical implementation details in summary
- Write paragraphs in summary line
- Use past tense
Multi-file commits
When committing multiple related changes:
refactor(core): restructure authentication module
- Move auth logic from controllers to service layer
- Extract validation into separate validators
- Update tests to use new structure
- Add integration tests for auth flow
Breaking change: Auth service now requires config object
Scope examples
Frontend:
feat(ui): add loading spinner to dashboardfix(form): validate email format
Backend:
feat(api): add user profile endpointfix(db): resolve connection pool leak
Infrastructure:
chore(ci): update Node version to 20feat(docker): add multi-stage build
Breaking changes
Indicate breaking changes clearly:
feat(api)!: restructure API response format
BREAKING CHANGE: All API responses now follow JSON:API spec
Previous format:
{ "data": {...}, "status": "ok" }
New format:
{ "data": {...}, "meta": {...} }
Migration guide: Update client code to handle new response structure
Template workflow
- Review changes:
git diff --staged - Identify type: Is it feat, fix, refactor, etc.?
- Determine scope: What part of the codebase?
- Write summary: Brief, imperative description
- Add body: Explain why and what impact
- Note breaking changes: If applicable
Interactive commit helper
Use git add -p for selective staging:
# Stage changes interactively
git add -p
# Review what's staged
git diff --staged
# Commit with message
git commit -m "type(scope): description"
Amending commits
Fix the last commit message:
# Amend commit message only
git commit --amend
# Amend and add more changes
git add forgotten-file.js
git commit --amend --no-edit
Best practices
- Atomic commits - One logical change per commit
- Test before commit - Ensure code works
- Reference issues - Include issue numbers if applicable
- Keep it focused - Don't mix unrelated changes
- Write for humans - Future you will read this
Commit message checklist
- Type is appropriate (feat/fix/docs/etc.)
- Scope is specific and clear
- Summary is under 50 characters
- Summary uses imperative mood
- Body explains WHY not just WHAT
- Breaking changes are clearly marked
- Related issue numbers are included