ai-superpower/.ai/instructions/skills/git.instructions.md
moilanik 99d13e6e4a feat: complete apply.sh v1 — summary, guard, dev root install, updated docs
- apply.sh: direct-run guard (only curl | bash allowed)
- apply.sh: DEV_ROOT passed as explicit arg from bootstrap
- apply.sh: .ai/ copied to dev root as real folder; projects symlink there
- apply.sh: counters + detailed summary (version prev→new, templated, refreshed, no-docs)
- apply.sh: find errors silenced, no crash on empty dev root
- .ai-superpower: added warning comment about deletion side effects
- .gitignore: .ai-instructions.conf → .ai-superpower.version
- scripts/: removed (hello.sh, scan-projects-with-git.sh, verify-docs-folder.sh, add-ai-context-to-docs-folder.sh)
- templates: monorepo sections split into AI instructions + developer instructions
- README.md: rewritten to match current architecture and behaviour
- docs/apply-requirements.md: FR-2.4, FR-3, FR-5, FR-6, FR-7, FR-8 updated
- docs/apply-usecases.md: full detailed Mermaid flowchart replacing placeholder
2026-03-03 11:19:35 +02:00

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Markdown

# Git Instructions
## 🚨 GIT POLICY - ABSOLUTELY CRITICAL
**NEVER EVER make git commands without explicit user approval!**
### Forbidden Commands - DO NOT RUN:
1.**git add** - User runs this themselves (including git add ., git add -A, git add <file>)
2.**git commit** - User runs this themselves
3.**git push** - User runs this themselves
4.**git push --force** - User runs this themselves
5.**git reset** - User runs this themselves
6.**ANY command that modifies git repository or server state**
### What You CAN Do:
-`git status` - Show current state
-`git diff` - Show changes
-`git log` - Show history
- ✅ Show the command user should run
- ✅ Explain what the command will do
### Exception:
Only if user explicitly says:
- "commit this now"
- "push this now"
- "go ahead and commit"
Otherwise: **SHOW the command, WAIT for user to run it**
---
## Best Practices
- Always show `git diff` before suggesting commits
- Show `git status` to verify what will be committed
- Explain impact of each git operation
- User controls git commands, you analyze and advise
- Never assume user wants to commit
- Production platform infrastructure: Stability > Speed
---
## Commit Message Workflow
When the user asks for a commit message:
1. **Run `git diff --staged` or `git diff`** — read what actually changed
2. **Documentation check** — scan the changed files and ask: does any `docs/` or `README.md` need updating based on these changes? If yes, flag it clearly before writing the message. Do not block the commit — just surface it.
3. **Write the commit message only** — one short subject line, optionally a blank line and brief body if the change needs context. Output just the message text in a code block. Do NOT wrap it in a `git commit` command.
Format:
```
<type>: <what changed>
<optional: why, or what is not obvious from the diff>
```
Types: `feat`, `fix`, `docs`, `refactor`, `chore`