Replace atomic-by-type grouping (docs together, feat together, chore together) with development-step reconstruction. Commits now retrace the order work happened — one commit per logical step, regardless of file type. Count adapts to the workload: 1 commit or 20. Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
103 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
103 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
---
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name: commit-changer
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description: Analyze all changes since the last commit and create commits that retrace the development steps — one commit per logical step, in the order work happened.
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tools: Bash, Read, Grep, Glob, Agent, AskUserQuestion
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---
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# Git Smart Commit
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Reconstruct the development narrative from a working directory. The goal
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is to create a git history that reads like a story of how the work was
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done — each commit is one development step, in chronological order.
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**Not atomic-by-type.** Don't group by category (all docs together, all
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config together). Group by development step: "first I did X, then Y
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needed Z, then I cleaned up W." A single step may touch code + tests +
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docs if they were done together. The number of commits depends entirely
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on the amount and variety of changes — could be 1, could be 20.
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## Workflow
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### Phase 1: Gather context
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Run these commands to understand the full picture:
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```bash
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git status
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git diff # unstaged changes
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git diff --cached # staged changes
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git diff HEAD --stat # summary of all changes vs last commit
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git log --oneline -5 # recent commit style
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```
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Also check for untracked files that should be included. Read the content
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of changed files to understand what each change does — don't just look
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at filenames.
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### Phase 2: Reconstruct the development steps
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Read the actual diffs and file contents. Reconstruct **what happened in
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what order** — the sequence of development steps that produced these
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changes. Ask yourself:
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1. What was the first thing done? (e.g. "cleaned up the README")
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2. What came next? (e.g. "added a new section about X")
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3. What followed from that? (e.g. "updated the related config")
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4. Were there side-fixes or cleanups along the way?
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Each step becomes one commit. A step can touch multiple files if they
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were changed together as part of the same action. A single file can
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appear in multiple steps if it was modified at different stages.
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Guidelines:
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- **Follow the narrative**, not the file type. If a feature was added
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with its docs and tests in one go, that's one commit — not three.
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- **Don't force splits.** If all changes serve one purpose, one commit
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is the right answer.
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- **Don't merge unrelated steps.** If the README cleanup and the config
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fix were separate actions, they get separate commits even if both are
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"chore" type.
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- **Order matters.** Commits should read in the order work happened.
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Earlier steps first.
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### Phase 3: Execute commits
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Proceed directly — no confirmation needed. For each development step,
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in chronological order:
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1. Stage only the files for that step: `git add <specific-files>`
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- If a single file has changes belonging to different steps and
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`git add -p` cannot be used (interactive), mention it to the user
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and ask how they want to handle it (commit together in the first
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relevant step, or split manually).
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2. Create the commit with a message that describes the step
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3. Verify with `git status` that the right files were committed
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### Commit message format
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Follow Conventional Commits and match the repo's existing style:
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```
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<type>(<scope>): <short description>
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<optional body — what and why, not how>
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Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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```
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Types: `feat`, `fix`, `refactor`, `chore`, `docs`, `test`, `style`, `perf`
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Keep the first line under 72 characters. The body explains motivation
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when the diff alone isn't self-explanatory.
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### Edge cases
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- **No changes**: tell the user there's nothing to commit
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- **Only staged changes**: respect what's already staged — ask if the
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user wants to commit just those, or also include unstaged/untracked
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- **Merge conflicts**: don't try to commit — tell the user to resolve
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- **Single logical change**: one commit is the right answer — don't
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artificially split what was done as one action
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- **Sensitive files** (.env, credentials, keys): warn the user and
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exclude them from commits by default
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