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manage-git-branches

pjt222
Updated 2 days ago
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About

This Claude skill helps developers manage Git branches for creating features, switching contexts, and keeping branches synchronized. It covers branch naming, safe switching with stash, upstream sync, and cleanup of merged branches. Use it when starting new work, switching tasks, or maintaining branch hygiene after merges.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Primary
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Plugin CommandAlternative
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/manage-git-branches

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

Documentation

Manage Git Branches

Create, switch, sync, and clean up branches following consistent naming conventions.

When to Use

  • Starting work on a new feature or bug fix
  • Switching between tasks on different branches
  • Keeping a feature branch up to date with main
  • Cleaning up branches after merging pull requests
  • Listing and inspecting branches

Inputs

  • Required: Repository with at least one commit
  • Optional: Branch naming convention (default: type/description)
  • Optional: Base branch for new branches (default: main)
  • Optional: Remote name (default: origin)

Procedure

Step 1: Create a Feature Branch

Use a consistent naming convention:

PrefixPurposeExample
feature/New functionalityfeature/add-weighted-mean
fix/Bug fixfix/null-pointer-in-parser
docs/Documentationdocs/update-api-reference
refactor/Code restructuringrefactor/extract-validation
chore/Maintenancechore/update-dependencies
test/Test additionstest/add-edge-case-coverage
# Create and switch to a new branch from main
git checkout -b feature/add-weighted-mean main

# Or using the newer switch command
git switch -c feature/add-weighted-mean main

Got: New branch created and checked out. git branch shows the new branch with an asterisk.

If fail: If the base branch doesn't exist locally, fetch first: git fetch origin main && git checkout -b feature/name origin/main.

Step 2: Track Remote Branches

Set up tracking when pushing a new branch for the first time:

# Push and set upstream tracking
git push -u origin feature/add-weighted-mean

# Check tracking relationship
git branch -vv

To check out a remote branch that someone else created:

git fetch origin
git checkout feature/their-branch
# Git auto-creates a local tracking branch

Got: Local branch tracks the corresponding remote branch. git branch -vv shows the upstream.

If fail: If auto-tracking fails, set it manually: git branch --set-upstream-to=origin/feature/name feature/name.

Step 3: Switch Branches Safely

Before switching, ensure the working tree is clean:

# Check for uncommitted changes
git status

If changes exist, either commit or stash them:

# Option 1: Commit work in progress
git add <files>
git commit -m "wip: save progress on validation logic"

# Option 2: Stash changes temporarily
git stash push -m "validation work in progress"

# Switch branches
git checkout main

# Later, restore stashed changes
git checkout feature/add-weighted-mean
git stash pop

List and manage stashes:

# List all stashes
git stash list

# Apply a specific stash (without removing it)
git stash apply stash@{1}

# Drop a stash
git stash drop stash@{0}

Got: Branch switch succeeds. Working tree reflects the target branch's state. Stashed changes are recoverable.

If fail: If switch is blocked by uncommitted changes that would be overwritten, stash or commit first. git stash cannot stash untracked files unless you use git stash push -u.

Step 4: Sync with Upstream

Keep your feature branch up to date with the base branch:

# Fetch latest changes
git fetch origin

# Rebase onto latest main (preferred — keeps linear history)
git rebase origin/main

# Or merge main into your branch (creates merge commit)
git merge origin/main

Got: Branch now includes the latest changes from main. No conflicts, or conflicts resolved (see resolve-git-conflicts).

If fail: If rebase causes conflicts, resolve each one and git rebase --continue. If the conflicts are too complex, abort with git rebase --abort and try git merge origin/main instead.

Step 5: Clean Up Merged Branches

After pull requests are merged, remove stale branches:

# Delete a local branch that has been merged
git branch -d feature/add-weighted-mean

# Delete a local branch (force, even if not merged)
git branch -D feature/abandoned-experiment

# Delete a remote branch
git push origin --delete feature/add-weighted-mean

# Prune remote-tracking references for deleted remote branches
git fetch --prune

Got: Merged branches are removed locally and remotely. git branch shows only active branches.

If fail: git branch -d refuses to delete unmerged branches. If the branch was merged via squash merge on GitHub, Git may not recognize it as merged. Use git branch -D if you are certain the work is preserved.

Step 6: List and Inspect Branches

# List local branches
git branch

# List all branches (local and remote)
git branch -a

# List branches with last commit info
git branch -v

# List branches merged into main
git branch --merged main

# List branches NOT yet merged
git branch --no-merged main

# See which remote branch each local branch tracks
git branch -vv

Got: Clear view of all branches, their status, and tracking relationships.

If fail: If remote branches appear stale, run git fetch --prune to clean up references to deleted remote branches.

Validation

  • Branch names follow the agreed naming convention
  • Feature branches are created from the correct base branch
  • Local branches track their remote counterparts
  • Merged branches are cleaned up (local and remote)
  • Working tree is clean before branch switches
  • Stashed changes are not left orphaned

Pitfalls

  • Working on main directly: Always create a feature branch. Committing directly to main makes it difficult to create PRs and collaborate.
  • Forgetting to fetch before branching: Creating a branch from a stale local main means you start behind. Always git fetch origin first.
  • Long-lived branches: Feature branches that live for weeks accumulate merge conflicts. Sync frequently and keep branches short-lived.
  • Orphaned stashes: git stash is temporary storage. Don't rely on it for long-term work. Commit or branch instead.
  • Deleting unmerged work: git branch -D is destructive. Double-check with git log branch-name before force-deleting.
  • Not pruning: Remote branches deleted on GitHub still appear locally until you git fetch --prune.

Related Skills

  • commit-changes - committing work on branches
  • create-pull-request - opening PRs from feature branches
  • resolve-git-conflicts - handling conflicts during sync
  • configure-git-repository - repository setup and branch strategy

GitHub Repository

pjt222/agent-almanac
Path: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/manage-git-branches
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