Design e UI Fonte oficial
Mensagens padronizadas com Conventional Commits
Gere commits claros no formato Conventional Commits após revisar arquivos alterados, diffs, escopo, tipo e possíveis breaking changes.
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O que esta skill faz
Esta skill oferece um fluxo estruturado para produzir mensagens compatíveis com Conventional Commits. Ela usa tipo, escopo, descrição e campos opcionais para corpo, referências e mudanças incompatíveis.
Quando usar
- Criar mensagens consistentes para novas funcionalidades
- Descrever correções, refatorações e mudanças de documentação
- Registrar breaking changes no rodapé
- Padronizar o histórico de commits de uma equipe
Como usar
- Execute git status para revisar os arquivos alterados
- Inspecione as mudanças com git diff ou git diff --cached
- Adicione os arquivos desejados com git add
- Escolha tipo, escopo e descrição coerentes com o diff
- Crie o commit com git commit -m
O que revisar antes de instalar
- A mensagem depende de uma revisão correta do diff
- O escopo é opcional e deve refletir a convenção do projeto
- A skill não substitui testes ou revisão de código
SKILL.md
--- name: conventional-commit description: 'Prompt and workflow for generating conventional commit messages using a structured XML format. Guides users to create standardized, descriptive commit messages in line with the Conventional Commits specification, including instructions, examples, and validation.' --- ### Instructions ```xml <description>This file contains a prompt template for generating conventional commit messages. It provides instructions, examples, and formatting guidelines to help users write standardized, descriptive commit messages in accordance with the Conventional Commits specification.</description> ``` ### Workflow **Follow these steps:** 1. Run `git status` to review changed files. 2. Run `git diff` or `git diff --cached` to inspect changes. 3. Stage your changes with `git add <file>`. 4. Construct your commit message using the following XML structure. 5. After generating your commit message, Copilot will automatically run the following command in your integrated terminal (no confirmation needed): ```bash git commit -m "type(scope): description" ``` 6. Just execute this prompt and Copilot will handle the commit for you in the terminal. ### Commit Message Structure ```xml <commit-message> <type>feat|fix|docs|style|refactor|perf|test|build|ci|chore|revert</type> <scope>()</scope> <description>A short, imperative summary of the change</description> <body>(optional: more detailed explanation)</body> <footer>(optional: e.g. BREAKING CHANGE: details, or issue references)</footer> </commit-message> ``` ### Examples ```xml <examples> <example>feat(parser): add ability to parse arrays</example> <example>fix(ui): correct button alignment</example> <example>docs: update README with usage instructions</example> <example>refactor: improve performance of data processing</example> <example>chore: update dependencies</example> <example>feat!: send email on registration (BREAKING CHANGE: email service required)</example> </examples> ``` ### Validation ```xml <validation> <type>Must be one of the allowed types. See <reference>https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/#specification</reference></type> <scope>Optional, but recommended for clarity.</scope> <description>Required. Use the imperative mood (e.g., "add", not "added").</description> <body>Optional. Use for additional context.</body> <footer>Use for breaking changes or issue references.</footer> </validation> ``` ### Final Step ```xml <final-step> <cmd>git commit -m "type(scope): description"</cmd> <note>Replace with your constructed message. Include body and footer if needed.</note> </final-step> ```