en un clic
en un clic
Create a commit (or draft a commit message) in a Jujutsu repository
How to use `jj`, the Jujutsu version control system
Create a GitHub pull request as a draft, auto-generating title and body from commits
Review a GitHub pull request, examining the summary, linked resources, and diff
Interact with Neovim via RPC to annotate code, navigate files, and do walkthroughs
This skill should be used when the user mentions Jira issues (e.g., "PROJ-123"), asks about tickets, wants to create/view/update issues, check sprint status, or manage their Jira workflow. Triggers on keywords like "jira", "issue", "ticket", "sprint", "backlog", or issue key patterns.
| name | git-commit |
| description | Create a commit (or draft a commit message) in a Git repository |
Your user may invoke this skill explicitly with a slash command, or informally with a phrase like "commit this" or "suggest a commit message". If they use a loose instruction like "commit this" your first task is to determine whether you are working in a Git repository and should make a Git commit (using this skill), or you are working in a Jujutsu repo and should create a Jujutsu commit (using the dedicated Jujutsu commit skill).
IMPORTANT: Always identify the repository root of the current working directory before making a commit. You must ensure that you are actually in a repo, and that the repo uses the specific version control system that you intend to use to create the commit.
Most frequently, you will be in a Git repository (which you can determine via
the presence of a .git directory and the absence of a .jj directory in the
current working directory's repository root). In Git repositories, you should
use this skill to create commits.
Less frequently, you will find yourself in a Jujutsu repository (which you can
determine via the presence of a .jj directory in the current working
directory's repository root). In Jujutsu repositories, you should use the
dedicated Jujutsu commit skill to create commits. For general information on
Jujutsu, see the Jujutsu version-control skill.
Generally, if your user wants you to commit only a subset of the changes in the working directory, they will instruct you to do so. Nevertheless, if you determine that there are unrelated changes waiting to be committed, you should clarify with the user how they wish to split them up into distinct commits, rather than committing them all at once.
Usually, you will include all changes in the working directory in the commit
(that is, you should run git diff to see what the changes are, and/or
git diff --staged to see what has already been staged).
.agent-notes/, a directory which may be ignored via the global
~/.config/git/ignore file: these plan files should never be included in a
commit as they are intended to be local-only aids to development.| Type | When to use |
|---|---|
| fix | Bug fixes |
| feat | New features |
| chore | Content |
| refactor | Code improvements (eg. for better readability, easier maintenance etc) which don't change behavior |
| docs | Documentation changes (including changes to code comments) |
| test | Changing or adding/removing tests |
| perf | Performance improvements |
| style | Formatting changes, automated lint fixes |
refactor: remove unused `recurse` setting
We were never exposing a user-accessible setting here. It is always `true`
in practice, except in the benchmarks where we offered an override via the
environment.
If there is ever a call for this in the future, we can resurrect it, but
for now, leaving it out presents us with an opportunity to simplify.
It may even be a tiny bit faster (1.3% better CPU time, and 2.4%
better wall time), with reasonable confidence, due to saving us some
conditional checks.