| name | changelog |
| description | Changelog style guide for writing RELEASE.md files. Use when creating or reviewing RELEASE.md, writing changelog entries, or preparing a PR that needs a changelog. |
Changelog Style Guide
This guide describes the style for writing RELEASE.md files for hegel-go. The style is modeled on the Hypothesis changelog.
Choosing RELEASE_TYPE
hegel-go is currently zerover (0.x.y), so the usual semver mapping does not apply. While we are pre-1.0:
patch — bug fixes, internal changes, and new features / non-breaking API additions. The default choice.
minor — breaking changes only. Any change that requires users to update their code (renamed/removed APIs, changed signatures, behavior changes that could break downstream tests) is a minor bump.
major — not used while we are zerover. Reserved for the eventual 1.0 and beyond.
If you find yourself reaching for minor because the change feels "big," check whether it actually breaks any caller. A large new feature that adds API surface without removing or changing existing behavior is still a patch.
Opening sentence pattern
Every entry should open with a sentence that signals the scope and nature of the change:
- Patch (fixes, improvements, new features): Start with
"This patch ..."
- Minor (breaking changes): Start with
"This release ..." and explain migration
- Tiny internal-only changes: A bare sentence is fine —
"Internal refactoring." or "Clean up some internal code."
The opening verb should tell the reader what kind of change this is:
| Change type | RELEASE_TYPE | Opening pattern |
|---|
| Bug fix | patch | "This patch fixes ..." or "Fix ..." |
| New feature | patch | "This patch adds ..." |
| Improvement | patch | "This patch improves ..." or "This patch makes ... more ..." |
| Performance | patch | "This patch improves the performance of ..." or "Optimize ..." |
| Deprecation | minor | "This release deprecates ..." |
| Breaking change | minor | "This release changes ..." (then explain migration) |
| Internal-only | patch | "Internal refactoring." / "Refactor some internals." / "Clean up some internal code." |
Describe the user impact, not the implementation
Bad: "Refactored the socket handling code to use a shared connection pool."
Good: "This patch changes the way the client manages the server to run a single persistent process for the whole test run. This should improve the performance of running many hegel tests."
For bug fixes, describe the bug (what went wrong from the user's perspective), not just "fixed a bug":
Bad: "Fix bug in server crash detection."
Good: "Fix server crash detection. The client now properly detects when the hegel server process exits unexpectedly, instead of hanging indefinitely."
Length calibration
- Internal-only changes: 1 sentence. (
"Refactor some internals.")
- Simple bug fixes: 1-3 sentences. Describe the bug and what changed.
- New features: 1-2 short paragraphs. Describe what it does and why it's useful.
- Breaking changes / API changes: Multiple paragraphs. Include before/after code examples and migration guidance.
Don't pad entries. If a change can be described in one sentence, use one sentence.
Code examples
Include fenced code blocks for:
- New API features (show usage)
- Breaking changes (show before/after)
- Anything where seeing the code is clearer than describing it
Don't include code blocks for bug fixes or internal changes.
References
- Reference GitHub issues when relevant:
([#123](https://github.com/hegeldev/hegel-go/issues/123))
- Reference previous versions when building on prior work
- Reference related libraries/specs when relevant
Tone
- Third person, present tense for describing behavior
- Professional but conversational — be direct, not formal
- Honest about uncertainty:
"This should improve performance", "We expect this to...", "In some cases this may..."
- It's okay to briefly explain why a change was made if the motivation isn't obvious
Things to avoid
- No emojis
- No bullet lists for single-topic entries (use them for multi-topic entries like API cleanups)
- No commit hashes or PR numbers in the text (issue numbers are fine)
- Don't describe the implementation when you can describe the effect
- Don't use vague language like
"various improvements" — be specific about what changed
- Don't add marketing language or hype
Examples
Good patch (bug fix):
RELEASE_TYPE: patch
This patch fixes `Slices` generating duplicate elements in rare cases when the element generator had a very small output space.
Good patch (internal):
RELEASE_TYPE: patch
Internal refactoring of the protocol handling code.
Good patch (new feature):
RELEASE_TYPE: patch
This patch adds support for `HealthCheck`. A health check is a proactive error raised by Hegel when we detect your test is likely to have degraded testing power or performance. For example, `FilterTooMuch` is raised when too many test cases are filtered out by the rejection sampling of `.Filter()` or `Assume()`.
Health checks can be suppressed with the new `SuppressHealthCheck` setting.
Good minor (breaking change):
RELEASE_TYPE: minor
This release changes the signature of `RunHegelTest` to accept a `*testing.T` instead of a `testing.TB`:
\```go
// before
func RunHegelTest(t testing.TB, body func()) {}
// after
func RunHegelTest(t *testing.T, body func()) {}
\```
This will require updating your test function signatures, but should be strictly more expressive.