Add 260+ Claude Code skills from skills.sh

Complete collection of AI agent skills including:
- Frontend Development (Vue, React, Next.js, Three.js)
- Backend Development (NestJS, FastAPI, Node.js)
- Mobile Development (React Native, Expo)
- Testing (E2E, frontend, webapp)
- DevOps (GitHub Actions, CI/CD)
- Marketing (SEO, copywriting, analytics)
- Security (binary analysis, vulnerability scanning)
- And many more...

Synchronized from: https://skills.sh/

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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---
name: commit-work
description: "Create high-quality git commits: review/stage intended changes, split into logical commits, and write clear commit messages (including Conventional Commits). Use when the user asks to commit, craft a commit message, stage changes, or split work into multiple commits."
---
# Commit work
## Goal
Make commits that are easy to review and safe to ship:
- only intended changes are included
- commits are logically scoped (split when needed)
- commit messages describe what changed and why
## Inputs to ask for (if missing)
- Single commit or multiple commits? (If unsure: default to multiple small commits when there are unrelated changes.)
- Commit style: Conventional Commits are required.
- Any rules: max subject length, required scopes.
## Workflow (checklist)
1) Inspect the working tree before staging
- `git status`
- `git diff` (unstaged)
- If many changes: `git diff --stat`
2) Decide commit boundaries (split if needed)
- Split by: feature vs refactor, backend vs frontend, formatting vs logic, tests vs prod code, dependency bumps vs behavior changes.
- If changes are mixed in one file, plan to use patch staging.
3) Stage only what belongs in the next commit
- Prefer patch staging for mixed changes: `git add -p`
- To unstage a hunk/file: `git restore --staged -p` or `git restore --staged <path>`
4) Review what will actually be committed
- `git diff --cached`
- Sanity checks:
- no secrets or tokens
- no accidental debug logging
- no unrelated formatting churn
5) Describe the staged change in 1-2 sentences (before writing the message)
- "What changed?" + "Why?"
- If you cannot describe it cleanly, the commit is probably too big or mixed; go back to step 2.
6) Write the commit message
- Use Conventional Commits (required):
- `type(scope): short summary`
- blank line
- body (what/why, not implementation diary)
- footer (BREAKING CHANGE) if needed
- Prefer an editor for multi-line messages: `git commit -v`
- Use `references/commit-message-template.md` if helpful.
7) Run the smallest relevant verification
- Run the repo's fastest meaningful check (unit tests, lint, or build) before moving on.
8) Repeat for the next commit until the working tree is clean
## Deliverable
Provide:
- the final commit message(s)
- a short summary per commit (what/why)
- the commands used to stage/review (at minimum: `git diff --cached`, plus any tests run)