2.5 KiB
Usage
Overview
The commit
command provides an interactive way to create structured commits. Use either:
cz commit
cz c
(shortcut)
By default, Commitizen uses conventional commits, but you can customize the commit rules to match your project's needs. See the customization guide for details.
Basic Usage
Interactive Commit Creation
Simply run cz commit
in your terminal to start the interactive commit creation process. The command will guide you through creating a properly formatted commit message according to your configured rules.
Writing Messages to File
You can save the generated commit message to a file using:
cz commit --write-message-to-file COMMIT_MSG_FILE
This can be combined with --dry-run
to only write the message without creating a commit. This is particularly useful for automatically preparing commit messages.
Advanced Features
Git Command Options
You can pass any git commit options using the --
syntax:
cz commit <commitizen-args> -- <git-cli-args>
# Examples:
cz c --dry-run -- -a -S # Stage all changes and sign the commit
cz c -a -- -n # Stage all changes and skip the pre-commit and commit-msg hooks
!!! warning
The --signoff
option (or -s
) is now recommended being used with the new syntax: cz commit -- -s
. The old syntax cz commit --signoff
is deprecated and will be removed in v5.
Retry
- Use
cz commit --retry
to reuse the last commit message after a failed commit attempt - Set
retry_after_failure: true
in your configuration to automatically retry - Use
cz commit --no-retry
to force a new commit message prompt
Message Length Control
Control the length of your commit messages using the -l
or --message-length-limit
option:
cz commit -l 72 # Limits message length to 72 characters
!!! note The length limit only applies to the first line of the commit message. For conventional commits, this means the limit applies from the type of change through the subject. The body and footer are not counted.
Technical Notes
For platform compatibility, the commit
command disables ANSI escaping in its output. This means pre-commit hooks coloring will be deactivated as discussed in commitizen-tools/commitizen#417.