incremental-commits

When a feature touches multiple files, implement in waves. Each wave is one logical concern, one commit. This creates a clean git history that tells a story.

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Install skill "incremental-commits" with this command: npx skills add epicenterhq/epicenter/epicenterhq-epicenter-incremental-commits

Incremental Commits

When a feature touches multiple files, implement in waves. Each wave is one logical concern, one commit. This creates a clean git history that tells a story.

The Pattern

Wave 1: Foundation (types, interfaces) ↓ Wave 2: Factories/Builders (functions that create instances) ↓ Wave 3: Contracts/APIs (public interfaces that use types) ↓ Wave 4: Infrastructure (utilities, converters, dependencies) ↓ Wave 5: Consumers (apps, UI, integrations)

Not every change needs all waves. A simple bugfix might be one wave. A cross-cutting refactor might need five.

Wave Characteristics

Each wave must be:

Property Description

Atomic One logical concern per wave

Buildable Code compiles after this wave (run type-check)

Focused Changes relate to ONE layer/concern

Complete No half-done work within a wave

Real Example: Schema Refactor

This feature moved metadata from workspace to tables. Five waves:

Wave 1: Types

feat(schema): add IconDefinition, CoverDefinition, and FieldMetadata types

  • Add IconDefinition discriminated union (emoji | external)
  • Add CoverDefinition discriminated union (external)
  • Add FieldMetadata with optional name/description to all field types
  • Update TableDefinition to use icon/cover instead of emoji/order

Files: types.ts only. Foundation for everything else.

Wave 2: Factories

feat(schema): add optional name/description to field factory functions

All factory functions (id, text, richtext, integer, real, boolean, date, select, tags, json) now accept optional name and description parameters.

Files: factories.ts only. Uses types from Wave 1.

Wave 3: Contracts

feat(schema): remove emoji and description from WorkspaceSchema

Workspace is now just a container with guid, id, name, tables, and kv. Visual metadata (icon, cover, description) now lives on TableDefinition.

Files: contract.ts only. API change using new types.

Wave 4: Infrastructure

feat(schema): use slugify for human-readable SQL column names

  • Add @sindresorhus/slugify dependency
  • Add toSqlIdentifier() helper using slugify with '_' separator
  • SQLite columns now use field.name (or derived from key) instead of key

Files: to-drizzle.ts , package.json . Utility that uses field metadata.

Wave 5: Consumers

feat(schema): update epicenter app to use TablesWithMetadata

  • WorkspaceSchema now accepts TablesSchema | TablesWithMetadata
  • Export new types from package index
  • Update app to create proper TableDefinition with metadata

Files: App files that consume the new types.

The Workflow

Plan waves before coding

  • List files that need changes

  • Group by layer/concern

  • Order by dependency (foundations first)

Implement one wave

  • Make changes for that wave only

  • Resist temptation to "fix one more thing"

Verify the wave

  • Run type-check: bun run tsc --noEmit

  • Ensure no errors introduced

Commit the wave

  • Use conventional commit format

  • Message describes what this wave accomplishes

  • Body can list specific changes

Repeat for next wave

When to Use Waves

Scenario Waves? Why

Single file bugfix No One change, one commit

Add new type + factory Maybe Could be 1-2 waves

Refactor across 5+ files Yes Need logical grouping

Breaking API change Yes Types → API → Consumers

Add dependency + use it Yes Infra wave then usage wave

Anti-Patterns

Giant Commit

refactor: update schema system

  • Add new types
  • Update factories
  • Change contracts
  • Add slugify
  • Update app

Problem: One monolithic commit. Can't bisect, can't revert partially, no story.

Micro Commits

feat: add IconDefinition type feat: add CoverDefinition type feat: add FieldMetadata type feat: update IdFieldSchema feat: update TextFieldSchema ...

Problem: Too granular. 20 commits for one logical change. Noise.

Wrong Order

Wave 1: Update app to use new types ❌ Wave 2: Add the types ❌

Problem: Wave 1 won't compile. Bottom-up, not top-down.

Dependency Order Heuristic

When deciding wave order, ask: "What does this file import?"

types.ts → imports nothing (foundation) factories.ts → imports types.ts contract.ts → imports types.ts converters.ts → imports types.ts, may add deps app/ → imports everything above

Files that import nothing come first. Files that import everything come last.

Branch Strategy

For multi-wave work:

Create feature branch

git checkout -b feat/my-feature

Wave 1

... make changes ...

git add <files> && git commit -m "feat(scope): wave 1 description"

Wave 2

... make changes ...

git add <files> && git commit -m "feat(scope): wave 2 description"

... continue waves ...

When done, all waves are individual commits on the branch

PR shows clean history of how the feature evolved

Quick Reference

Before starting:

  • List all files that need changes

  • Group by layer (types, factories, contracts, infra, consumers)

  • Order by dependency

For each wave:

  • Change only files in this wave

  • Run type-check

  • Commit with descriptive message

  • Move to next wave

After all waves:

  • Final type-check

  • Run tests if applicable

  • Create PR with clean commit history

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