| name | pr-creation |
| description | Creates high-quality pull requests with an iterative compress-critique-fix loop before submission. Activate this skill whenever you are asked to create, open, submit, or push a pull request, OR whenever a new feature, fix, or refactor is complete and ready to ship. Also activate when the user says "make a PR", "open a PR", "submit this for review", "push and create a PR", "I'm done, create the PR", "the feature is done", "I'm finished", or any variation of completing work / requesting a pull request. Always activate before running `gh pr create`.
|
Pull Request Creation Skill
IMPORTANT: Always follow this skill before creating any PR. Do not skip steps, especially the iterative compress-critique-fix loop.
When to Use
Activate this skill when the user says any of the following (or similar):
- “Create a PR” / “Create a pull request”
- “Open a PR” / “Open a pull request”
- “Make a PR for this”
- “Submit this for review”
- “Push and create a PR”
- “I’m done, create the PR”
- “Can you PR this?”
- “Send this up for review”
- “The feature is done” / “I’m finished” / “Ship it”
Also activate when:
- You have just finished implementing a new feature, fix, or refactor—run the loop, then create the PR
- The user asks you to submit completed work
- CLAUDE.md or task instructions say to create a PR when done
Do NOT use this skill for:
- Reviewing an existing PR (use
gh pr view or gh pr diff instead)
- Merging a PR (
gh pr merge)
- Updating a PR description only (just run
gh pr edit)
Prerequisites
- GitHub CLI (
gh) must be authenticated
- All changes must be committed to a feature branch (not
$CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF/master)
Updating an Existing PR
Before updating an existing PR (pushing new commits, editing the description, etc.), you MUST check its current status:
- Run
gh pr view <pr-number> --json state to check the PR state
- Based on the result:
- Open: Proceed with the update normally
- Merged: Do NOT update it. Create a new PR instead with the additional changes
- Closed (not merged): Ask the user what they’d like to do, if not already clarified
Workflow
Step 1: Gather Context
- The base branch is in the env variable
$CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF
- Run
git diff <base-branch>...HEAD to see all changes
- Run
git log <base-branch>..HEAD --oneline to see all commits
- Review the changed files to understand the scope
- Check for PR description guidance—look for
CONTRIBUTING.md, .github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md, or similar files in the repo. If found, read them and adapt the PR description to follow the repository’s conventions (see pr-templates.md for details)
Step 2: Push and Create the Pull Request
You MUST read pr-templates.md for the PR template and formatting guidelines before this step.
- Push the branch:
git push -u origin HEAD
- Check if a PR already exists for the current branch:
EXISTING_PR=$(gh pr list --head "$(git branch --show-current)" --json number --jq '.[0].number' 2>/dev/null)
If a PR already exists, update it with gh pr edit instead of creating a new one.
- Create the PR using
gh pr create with the template from the resource file. Make sure that you use the target branch
Step 3: Iterative Compress-Critique-Fix Loop
CI is already running; use this time to improve the code.
Run an iterative loop until you reach a fixed point—a full critique pass that turns up nothing worth changing. This is the same loop described in CLAUDE.md’s Self-Critique Loop section; apply it here on the full diff.
You MUST read .claude/skills/pr-creation/critique-prompt.md once before the first pass—it contains the detailed checklist the sub-agent needs.
Each pass:
- Launch a critique sub-agent using the Task tool:
subagent_type: “general-purpose”
description: “Critique code changes”
prompt: Include the full diff (git diff $CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF...HEAD) and the critique prompt from the resource file
- For each issue raised, assess validity, then take the easy wins first:
- Compress—delete dead code, unused imports, commented-out blocks, WHAT-comments, backwards-compat shims, premature abstractions
- Readability—tighter names, un-nest conditionals, combine related checks, guard-clause early returns
- Code reuse—extract duplicated logic into helpers; search for existing utilities before adding new ones
- Parametrize tests—collapse near-identical tests into a single parametrized/table-driven test with exact-equality assertions
- Fixtures—pull repeated setup/teardown into shared fixtures
- Correctness—bugs, edge cases, security, swallowed errors
- Commit the fixes (Conventional Commits format, per
CLAUDE.md)
- Start a fresh critique pass—the previous output is now stale
Stop when a full pass returns no actionable issues. Cap at ~5 passes; if issues are still being found at pass 5, stop, summarize what’s left, and ask the user how to proceed rather than looping silently.
Skip the loop for trivial changes (typo fixes, single-line config tweaks, pure docs edits)—say so explicitly when you skip.
Step 4: Run Validation
Run the project’s test/lint/typecheck commands (see pr-templates.md for common commands per language). Fix any failures before proceeding. If validation surfaces new defects, loop back into Step 3 with the fixes included.
Step 5: Update PR Title and Description (after any post-creation changes)
Push any commits made during the critique and validation steps, then update the PR to reflect the final state.
-
Push: git push
-
Re-read the diff (git diff $CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF...HEAD) and commit log (git log $CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF..HEAD --oneline) to see the full scope
-
Rewrite the title and body to accurately describe the current totality of changes, not just the original scope:
gh pr edit <pr-number> --title "<type>: <updated description>" --body "$(cat <<'EOF'
<updated body using template from pr-templates.md>
EOF
)"
Skip the description update if no commits were made after Step 2.
Step 6: Wait for CI Checks (MANDATORY)
- Run
gh pr checks <pr-number> --watch to monitor
- If any checks fail, investigate and fix the issues
- Push fixes, update the PR description (Step 5), and wait again
- Only proceed once all checks are green
Step 7: Report Result
Provide the PR URL and confirm all CI checks have passed.
Step 8: Iteration Retrospective
After reporting the result, briefly reflect on how you could have iterated faster on this task. Consider:
- Parallelization: Which investigations, tool calls, or sub-agent launches could have run in parallel instead of sequentially?
- Targeted checks over full sweeps: Were there broad searches or full test runs you ran locally that CI would have caught anyway? Could a more targeted check (single file, single test, quick lint) have been faster?
- Earlier CI delegation: CI started at Step 2; did the critique loop or local validation catch issues CI would have caught anyway?
- Critique loop efficiency: Did any critique passes surface issues that a quick re-read would have caught before launching the sub-agent?
State each insight as one concrete line. Skip this step if the task was trivial (single-file, no iteration needed).
Examples
Example 1: Simple Bug Fix
User says: “I’m done fixing the login bug, create a PR”
Claude’s actions:
- Runs
git diff $CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF...HEAD—sees changes in src/auth/login.ts and tests/auth/login.test.ts
- Runs
git log $CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF..HEAD --oneline—sees 2 commits
- Pushes and creates PR:
gh pr create --title "fix: handle null session token in login flow" --body "..."—CI starts immediately
- Launches critique sub-agent with the diff
- Critique returns: “Looks good, minor suggestion to add null check on line 42”
- Fixes the null check, commits:
fix: add null check for empty session token
- Runs
pnpm check && pnpm test && pnpm lint—all pass
- Pushes fixes, updates PR description to reflect the null-check fix
- Watches CI with
gh pr checks 47 --watch—all green
- Reports: “PR #47 created and all CI checks pass: https://github.com/org/repo/pull/47"
Example 2: Multi-Commit Feature
User says: “Submit this for review”
Claude’s actions:
- Runs
git diff $CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF...HEAD—sees changes across 8 files including new components, tests, and API routes
- Runs
git log $CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF..HEAD --oneline—sees 5 commits
- Pushes and creates PR with a draft description—CI starts immediately
- Pass 1: Critique flags 4 issues—unused import, two near-identical tests that should parametrize, duplicated validation logic across 2 components, an over-engineered single-caller wrapper. Fixes them: deletes the import, collapses the tests with
it.each, extracts a shared validateInput helper for the duplication, inlines the single-caller wrapper. Commits.
- Pass 2: Critique flags 2 more—a leftover WHAT-comment from the refactor and a nested conditional. Un-nests and removes the comment. Commits.
- Pass 3: Critique returns clean—fixed point reached, exit loop.
- Runs validation—all pass
- Pushes fixes, updates PR title and description to reflect all changes
- Watches CI—one check fails (lint warning on new file)
- Fixes lint issue, pushes, updates PR description again—all green
- Reports success with PR URL
Example 3: When Input Is Unclear
User says: “Push this up”
Claude asks: “I see you have changes on branch feat/user-dashboard. Would you like me to create a pull request against $CLAUDE_CODE_BASE_REF, or just push the branch without creating a PR?”
Error Handling
- Critique finds issues: Fix them before proceeding—do not skip
- Tests fail: Fix the tests, don’t skip them
gh not authenticated: Tell user to run gh auth login or set GH_TOKEN
- Push fails: Check branch permissions and remote configuration
- PR already exists (HTTP 422): Check for existing PRs first with
gh pr list --head "$(git branch --show-current)", then use gh pr edit to update
- No changes to PR: Confirm with the user that work is committed