Conventional Commit Generator — Create Standardized Git Messages
Generate properly formatted conventional commit messages by selecting a type (feat, fix, chore…), entering a scope and description, and optionally adding a body, breaking change footer, and issue reference.
How to Use Conventional Commit Generator — Create Standardized Git Messages
How to Use the Conventional Commit Generator:
Step 1: Select a Commit Type
Click one of the 11 type buttons to describe the nature of your change:
- feat — Introduces a new feature or capability to the codebase
- fix — Patches a bug in the existing code
- docs — Documentation changes only (README, comments, wikis)
- style — Formatting, whitespace, or semicolon changes that do not affect logic
- refactor — Code restructuring that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- perf — Code changes that improve runtime performance
- test — Adding or correcting unit tests, integration tests, or snapshots
- build — Changes to the build system, bundler config, or external dependencies (npm, webpack)
- ci — Changes to CI/CD pipelines, GitHub Actions, or deployment scripts
- chore — Housekeeping tasks that do not modify source or test files
- revert — Reverts a previous commit
Step 2: Add a Scope (Optional)
The scope identifies which part of the codebase is affected — typically a module, package, or feature name. Examples: auth, api, ui, deps, parser. Keep it lowercase and short.
Step 3: Write a Description
The description is the short, imperative-mood summary of what changed. Good examples:
- "add OAuth2 login with Google" ✅
- "fix null pointer in user data handler" ✅
- "added new login feature" ❌ (past tense)
- "this changes the API" ❌ (too vague)
The subject line length counter shows green (≤50 chars), amber (51–72 chars), or red (>72 chars). Most tools truncate subjects longer than 72 characters.
Step 4: Add a Body (Optional)
Use the body to explain the motivation behind the change, what the problem was, and why this is the right solution. Wrap lines at 72 characters. Leave the subject line blank if you only need the one-liner.
Step 5: Flag Breaking Changes (Optional)
Tick "Breaking change" if this commit changes a public API in a way that is not backward-compatible. This adds ! to the subject line and generates a BREAKING CHANGE: footer. Add a description explaining what breaks and how to migrate.
Step 6: Add an Issue Reference (Optional)
Enter an issue number (e.g. 456 or #456) and it will be formatted as Closes #456 in the footer. You can also type a full reference like Fixes #123 or Resolves #789 and it will be passed through as-is.
Step 7: Copy the Result
- Copy Full Message — copies the entire commit message including body and footers. Use with
git commit(opens your editor) or paste into GitHub's commit description. - Copy Subject Only — copies just the first line. Use with
git commit -m "…"for quick one-liner commits.
Example Output
feat(auth): add OAuth2 login with Google
fix(api): resolve null pointer in user data handler
The user object was not validated before accessing nested
properties, causing crashes for accounts with incomplete profiles.
Closes #456
feat(api)!: redesign REST endpoints for v2
BREAKING CHANGE: All v1 endpoints have been removed. Migrate to v2
endpoints documented at /docs/v2.
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