| name | auto-commit |
| description | Git commit guidelines for incremental commits. Read this when user asks you to auto commit as you go |
Git Commit Guidelines
When making changes to code, commit your changes incrementally as you work.
Commit Format
<type>: <subject>
<body>
Commit Types
- feat: New feature or functionality
- fix: Bug fix
- chore: Maintenance tasks, dependency updates, configuration changes
- docs: Documentation only changes
- style: Code style/formatting changes (no functional changes)
- refactor: Code restructuring without changing functionality
- test: Adding or modifying tests
- perf: Performance improvements
Subject Line Rules
- Maximum 90 characters
- Start with lowercase
- No period at the end
- Use imperative mood ("add" not "adds" or "added")
Body Rules
- Separate from subject with blank line
- Wrap at 72 characters
- Explain what and why, not how
- Only include when the change requires context
Commit Frequency
- Commit after each logical unit of change
- Each commit should represent one coherent change
- Don't bundle unrelated changes
Examples
Good Examples
feat: add user authentication middleware
Implements JWT-based authentication for API routes.
Includes token validation and refresh logic.
fix: resolve null pointer in user lookup
chore: update dependencies to latest versions
Bad Examples
feat: added new feature to the application that allows users to authenticate using JWT tokens and also fixed some bugs and updated dependencies
fix: Fixed bug.
Key Principles
- Be concise but descriptive
- One commit = one logical change
- Commit message should make sense without looking at the code
- Skip the body if the subject line is self-explanatory