Files
Ahmed Rehan e7ae616385 refactor: flatten Microsoft skills from nested to flat directory structure
Rewrote sync_microsoft_skills.py (v4) to use each SKILL.md's frontmatter
'name' field as the flat directory name under skills/, replacing the nested
skills/official/microsoft/<lang>/<category>/<service>/ hierarchy.

This fixes CI failures caused by the indexing, validation, and catalog
scripts expecting skills/<id>/SKILL.md (depth 1).

Changes:
- Rewrite scripts/sync_microsoft_skills.py for flat output with collision detection
- Update scripts/tests/inspect_microsoft_repo.py for flat name mapping
- Update scripts/tests/test_comprehensive_coverage.py for name uniqueness checks
- Delete skills/official/ nested directory
- Add 129 Microsoft skills as flat directories (e.g. skills/azure-mgmt-botservice-dotnet/)
- Move attribution files to docs/ (LICENSE-MICROSOFT, microsoft-skills-attribution.json)
- Rebuild skills_index.json, CATALOG.md, README.md (845 total skills)
2026-02-12 00:17:38 +05:00

1023 B

name, description
name description
wiki-changelog Analyzes git commit history and generates structured changelogs categorized by change type. Use when the user asks about recent changes, wants a changelog, or needs to understand what changed in the repository.

Wiki Changelog

Generate structured changelogs from git history.

When to Activate

  • User asks "what changed recently", "generate a changelog", "summarize commits"
  • User wants to understand recent development activity

Procedure

  1. Examine git log (commits, dates, authors, messages)
  2. Group by time period: daily (last 7 days), weekly (older)
  3. Classify each commit: Features (🆕), Fixes (🐛), Refactoring (🔄), Docs (📝), Config (🔧), Dependencies (📦), Breaking (⚠️)
  4. Generate concise user-facing descriptions using project terminology

Constraints

  • Focus on user-facing changes
  • Merge related commits into coherent descriptions
  • Use project terminology from README
  • Highlight breaking changes prominently with migration notes