Skip to content

carloscuesta/gitmoji

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date
Jun 10, 2024
Jun 14, 2023
Mar 9, 2025
Oct 26, 2019
Jun 14, 2023
Jun 14, 2023
May 21, 2023
Jan 6, 2022
Nov 1, 2023
Mar 8, 2025
Mar 9, 2025
Jun 14, 2023
Jul 21, 2024

Repository files navigation

gitmoji

Build Status Gitmoji

About

Gitmoji is an initiative to standardize and explain the use of emojis on GitHub commit messages.

Using emojis on commit messages provides an easy way of identifying the purpose or intention of a commit with only looking at the emojis used. As there are a lot of different emojis I found the need of creating a guide that can help to use emojis easier.

The gitmojis are published on the following package in order to be used as a dependency πŸ“¦.

To use gitmojis from your command line install gitmoji-cli. A gitmoji interactive client for using emojis on commit messages.

npm i -g gitmoji-cli

Example of usage

In case you need some ideas to integrate gitmoji in your project, here's a practical way to use it:

<intention> [scope?][:?] <message>
  • intention: An emoji from the list.
  • scope: An optional string that adds contextual information for the scope of the change.
  • message: A brief explanation of the change.

Contributing to gitmoji

Contributing to gitmoji is a piece of 🍰, read the contributing guidelines. You can discuss emojis using the issues section. To add a new emoji to the list create an issue and send a pull request, see how to send a pull request and add a gitmoji.

Spread the word

Are you using Gitmoji on your project? Set the Gitmoji badge on top of your readme using this code:

<a href="https://gitmoji.dev">
  <img
    src="https://img.shields.io/badge/gitmoji-%20😜%20😍-FFDD67.svg?style=flat-square"
    alt="Gitmoji"
  />
</a>

License

The code is available under the MIT license.