🎯

commit

🎯Skill

from mitsuhiko/agent-stuff

VibeIndex|
What it does

Generates concise, Conventional Commits-style git commits with smart file staging and optional scoping based on context.

πŸ“¦

Part of

mitsuhiko/agent-stuff(13 items)

commit

Installation

πŸ“‹ No install commands found in docs. Showing default command. Check GitHub for actual instructions.
Quick InstallInstall with npx
npx skills add mitsuhiko/agent-stuff --skill commit
2Installs
-
AddedFeb 4, 2026

Skill Details

SKILL.md

"Read this skill before making git commits"

Overview

Create a git commit for the current changes using a concise Conventional Commits-style subject.

Format

():

  • type REQUIRED. Use feat for new features, fix for bug fixes. Other common types: docs, refactor, chore, test, perf.
  • scope OPTIONAL. Short noun in parentheses for the affected area (e.g., api, parser, ui).
  • summary REQUIRED. Short, imperative, <= 72 chars, no trailing period.

Notes

  • Body is OPTIONAL. If needed, add a blank line after the subject and write short paragraphs.
  • Do NOT include breaking-change markers or footers.
  • Do NOT add sign-offs (no Signed-off-by).
  • Only commit; do NOT push.
  • If it is unclear whether a file should be included, ask the user which files to commit.
  • Treat any caller-provided arguments as additional commit guidance. Common patterns:

- Freeform instructions should influence scope, summary, and body.

- File paths or globs should limit which files to commit. If files are specified, only stage/commit those unless the user explicitly asks otherwise.

- If arguments combine files and instructions, honor both.

Steps

  1. Infer from the prompt if the user provided specific file paths/globs and/or additional instructions.
  2. Review git status and git diff to understand the current changes (limit to argument-specified files if provided).
  3. (Optional) Run git log -n 50 --pretty=format:%s to see commonly used scopes.
  4. If there are ambiguous extra files, ask the user for clarification before committing.
  5. Stage only the intended files (all changes if no files specified).
  6. Run git commit -m "" (and -m "" if needed).