This skill should be used when user asks to "commit these changes", "write commit message", "stage and commit", "create a commit", "commit staged files", or runs /commit-staged or /commit-creator commands.
Content & Writing
356 Stars
38 Forks
Updated Jan 14, 2026, 07:35 PM
Why Use This
This skill provides specialized capabilities for fcakyon's codebase.
Use Cases
Developing new features in the fcakyon repository
Refactoring existing code to follow fcakyon standards
Understanding and working with fcakyon's codebase structure
---
name: commit-workflow
description: This skill should be used when user asks to "commit these changes", "write commit message", "stage and commit", "create a commit", "commit staged files", or runs /commit-staged or /commit-creator commands.
---
# Commit Workflow
Complete workflow for creating commits following project standards.
## Process
1. **Use commit-creator agent**
- Run `/commit-staged [context]` for automated commit handling
- Or follow manual steps below
2. **Analyze staged files only**
- Check all staged files: `git diff --cached --name-only`
- Read diffs: `git diff --cached`
- Completely ignore unstaged changes
3. **Commit message format**
- First line: `{task-type}: brief description of the big picture change`
- Task types: `feat`, `fix`, `refactor`, `docs`, `style`, `test`, `build`
- Focus on 'why' and 'what', not implementation details
- For complex changes, add bullet points after blank line
4. **Message examples**
- `feat: implement user authentication system`
- `fix: resolve memory leak in data processing pipeline`
- `refactor: restructure API handlers to align with project architecture`
5. **Documentation update**
- Check README.md for:
- New features that should be documented
- Outdated descriptions no longer matching implementation
- Missing setup instructions for new dependencies
- Update as needed based on staged changes
6. **Execution**
- Commit uses HEREDOC syntax for proper formatting
- Verify commit message has correct format
- Don't add test plans to commit messages
## Best Practices
- Analyze staged files before writing message
- Keep first line concise (50 chars recommended)
- Use active voice in message
- Reference related code if helpful
- One logical change per commit
- Ensure README reflects implementation