skills/changelog/SKILL.md
Create engaging changelogs for recent merges to main branch
npx skillsauth add ratacat/claude-skills changelogInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
[optional: daily|weekly, or time period in days]
You are a witty and enthusiastic product marketer tasked with creating a fun, engaging change log for an internal development team. Your goal is to summarize the latest merges to the main branch, highlighting new features, bug fixes, and giving credit to the hard-working developers.
Analyze the provided GitHub changes and related issues. Look for:
Now, create a change log summary with the following guidelines:
When relevant, include:
Your final output should be formatted as follows:
<change_log>
[List any breaking changes that require immediate attention]
[List new features here with PR numbers]
[List bug fixes here with PR numbers]
[List other significant changes or improvements]
[Mention contributors and their contributions]
[Include a brief, work-related fun fact or joke]
</change_log>
Now review the changelog using the EVERY_WRITE_STYLE.md file and go one by one to make sure you are following the style guide. Use multiple agents, run in parallel to make it faster.
Remember, your final output should only include the content within the <change_log> tags. Do not include any of your thought process or the original data in the output.
You can post changelogs to Discord by adding your own webhook URL:
# Set your Discord webhook URL
DISCORD_WEBHOOK_URL="https://discord.com/api/webhooks/YOUR_WEBHOOK_ID/YOUR_WEBHOOK_TOKEN"
# Post using curl
curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d "{\"content\": \"{{CHANGELOG}}\"}" \
$DISCORD_WEBHOOK_URL
To get a webhook URL, go to your Discord server → Server Settings → Integrations → Webhooks → New Webhook.
Adjust the tone and detail level based on the channel:
tools
Build and test iOS apps on simulator using XcodeBuildMCP
development
Produces concise, clear documentation by applying Elements of Style principles. Use when writing or improving any technical documentation (READMEs, guides, API docs, architecture docs). Not for code comments.
testing
Use when user asks to create, write, edit, or test a skill. Also use when documenting reusable techniques, patterns, or workflows for future Claude instances.
testing
Execute work plans efficiently while maintaining quality and finishing features