Files
claude-code-skills-reference/github-contributor/SKILL.md
daymade 8363750c13 Release v1.22.0: Add skill-reviewer and github-contributor
- Add skill-reviewer v1.0.0 for reviewing Claude Code skills against best practices
  - Self-review mode: validate your own skills before publishing
  - External review mode: evaluate others' skill repositories
  - Auto-PR mode: fork, improve, submit PRs with additive-only changes
  - Auto-install dependencies: automatically installs skill-creator if missing

- Add github-contributor v1.0.0 for strategic open-source contribution
  - Four contribution types: Documentation, Code Quality, Bug Fixes, Features
  - Project selection criteria and red flags
  - PR excellence workflow and reputation building ladder
  - GitHub CLI commands and conventional commit format

- Update marketplace to v1.22.0 with 30 skills
- Update documentation (README, README.zh-CN, CLAUDE.md, CHANGELOG)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-15 23:02:40 +08:00

5.2 KiB

name, description
name description
github-contributor Strategic guide for becoming an effective GitHub contributor. Covers opportunity discovery, project selection, high-quality PR creation, and reputation building. Use when looking to contribute to open-source projects, building GitHub presence, or learning contribution best practices.

GitHub Contributor

Strategic guide for becoming an effective GitHub contributor and building your open-source reputation.

The Strategy

Core insight: Many open-source projects have room for improvement. By contributing high-quality PRs, you:

  • Build contributor reputation
  • Learn from top codebases
  • Expand professional network
  • Create public proof of skills

Contribution Types

1. Documentation Improvements

Lowest barrier, high impact.

  • Fix typos, grammar, unclear explanations
  • Add missing examples
  • Improve README structure
  • Translate documentation
Opportunity signals:
- "docs", "documentation" labels
- Issues asking "how do I..."
- Outdated screenshots or examples

2. Code Quality Enhancements

Medium effort, demonstrates technical skill.

  • Fix linter warnings
  • Add type annotations
  • Improve error messages
  • Refactor for readability
Opportunity signals:
- "good first issue" label
- "tech debt" or "refactor" labels
- Code without tests

3. Bug Fixes

High impact, builds trust.

  • Reproduce and fix reported bugs
  • Add regression tests
  • Document root cause
Opportunity signals:
- "bug" label with reproduction steps
- Issues with many thumbs up
- Stale bugs (maintainers busy)

4. Feature Additions

Highest effort, highest visibility.

  • Implement requested features
  • Add integrations
  • Performance improvements
Opportunity signals:
- "help wanted" label
- Features with clear specs
- Issues linked to roadmap

Project Selection

Good First Projects

Criteria Why
Active maintainers PRs get reviewed
Clear contribution guide Know expectations
"good first issue" labels Curated entry points
Recent merged PRs Project is alive
Friendly community Supportive feedback

Red Flags

  • No activity in 6+ months
  • Many open PRs without review
  • Hostile issue discussions
  • No contribution guidelines

Finding Projects

# GitHub search for good first issues
gh search issues "good first issue" --language=python --sort=created

# Search by topic
gh search repos "topic:cli" --sort=stars --limit=20

# Find repos you use
# Check dependencies in your projects

PR Excellence

Before Writing Code

Pre-PR Checklist:
- [ ] Read CONTRIBUTING.md
- [ ] Check existing PRs for similar changes
- [ ] Comment on issue to claim it
- [ ] Understand project conventions
- [ ] Set up development environment

Writing the PR

Title: Clear, conventional format

feat: Add support for YAML config files
fix: Resolve race condition in connection pool
docs: Update installation instructions for Windows
refactor: Extract validation logic into separate module

Description: Structured and thorough

## Summary
[What this PR does in 1-2 sentences]

## Motivation
[Why this change is needed]

## Changes
- [Change 1]
- [Change 2]

## Testing
[How you tested this]

## Screenshots (if UI)
[Before/After images]

After Submitting

  • Respond to feedback promptly
  • Make requested changes quickly
  • Be grateful for reviews
  • Don't argue, discuss

Building Reputation

The Contribution Ladder

Level 1: Documentation fixes
    ↓ (build familiarity)
Level 2: Small bug fixes
    ↓ (understand codebase)
Level 3: Feature contributions
    ↓ (trusted contributor)
Level 4: Maintainer status

Consistency Over Volume

❌ 10 PRs in one week, then nothing
✅ 1-2 PRs per week, sustained

Engage Beyond PRs

  • Answer questions in issues
  • Help triage bug reports
  • Review others' PRs (if welcome)
  • Join project Discord/Slack

Common Mistakes

Don't

  • Submit drive-by PRs without context
  • Argue with maintainers
  • Ignore code style guidelines
  • Make massive changes without discussion
  • Ghost after submitting

Do

  • Start with small, focused PRs
  • Follow project conventions exactly
  • Communicate proactively
  • Accept feedback gracefully
  • Build relationships over time

Workflow Template

Contribution Workflow:
- [ ] Find project with "good first issue"
- [ ] Read contribution guidelines
- [ ] Comment on issue to claim
- [ ] Fork and set up locally
- [ ] Make focused changes
- [ ] Test thoroughly
- [ ] Write clear PR description
- [ ] Respond to review feedback
- [ ] Celebrate when merged! 🎉

Quick Reference

GitHub CLI Commands

# Fork a repo
gh repo fork owner/repo --clone

# Create PR
gh pr create --title "feat: ..." --body "..."

# Check PR status
gh pr status

# View project issues
gh issue list --repo owner/repo --label "good first issue"

Commit Message Format

<type>(<scope>): <description>

[optional body]

[optional footer]

Types: feat, fix, docs, style, refactor, test, chore

References

  • references/pr_checklist.md - Complete PR quality checklist
  • references/project_evaluation.md - How to evaluate projects
  • references/communication_templates.md - Issue/PR templates