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commit

Create git commits with user approval and no Claude attribution

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3,795
Source
parcadei/Continuous-Claude-v3
Updated
2026-01-26
Slug
parcadei--Continuous-Claude-v3--commit
View on GitHubRaw SKILL.md

// install — copy + paste into any project

mkdir -p .claude/skills && curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/parcadei/Continuous-Claude-v3/HEAD/.claude/skills/commit/SKILL.md -o .claude/skills/commit.md

Drops the SKILL.md into .claude/skills/commit.md. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and any agent that loads SKILL.md files from .claude/skills/.

Commit Changes

You are tasked with creating git commits for the changes made during this session.

Process:

  1. Think about what changed:

    • Review the conversation history and understand what was accomplished
    • Run git status to see current changes
    • Run git diff to understand the modifications
    • Consider whether changes should be one commit or multiple logical commits
  2. Plan your commit(s):

    • Identify which files belong together
    • Draft clear, descriptive commit messages
    • Use imperative mood in commit messages
    • Focus on why the changes were made, not just what
  3. Present your plan to the user:

    • List the files you plan to add for each commit
    • Show the commit message(s) you'll use
    • Ask: "I plan to create [N] commit(s) with these changes. Shall I proceed?"
  4. Execute upon confirmation:

    • Use git add with specific files (never use -A or .)
    • Create commits with your planned messages
    • Show the result with git log --oneline -n [number]
  5. Generate reasoning (after each commit):

    • Run: bash "$CLAUDE_PROJECT_DIR/.claude/scripts/generate-reasoning.sh" <commit-hash> "<commit-message>"
    • This captures what was tried during development (build failures, fixes)
    • The reasoning file helps future sessions understand past decisions
    • Stored in .git/claude/commits/<hash>/reasoning.md

Important:

  • NEVER add co-author information or Claude attribution
  • Commits should be authored solely by the user
  • Do not include any "Generated with Claude" messages
  • Do not add "Co-Authored-By" lines
  • Write commit messages as if the user wrote them

Remember:

  • You have the full context of what was done in this session
  • Group related changes together
  • Keep commits focused and atomic when possible
  • The user trusts your judgment - they asked you to commit