skills/cameroncooke/skills/release-tweet

release-tweet

SKILL.md

Release Tweet Skill

Compose a release announcement tweet from GitHub release notes. This skill fetches the release, summarises changes, identifies contributors, cross-references X/Twitter handles, and outputs composed text for review. It does NOT post the tweet.

Workflow

Step 1 — Fetch release notes

Determine the repository from the current working directory or user input.

If the user specifies a tag:

gh release view <tag> --repo <owner/repo>

If no tag is given, find the latest release:

gh release list --repo <owner/repo> --limit 1

Then fetch its body:

gh release view <tag> --repo <owner/repo>

Extract the release body markdown for processing.

Step 2 — Summarise changes as tweet bullets

Parse the release markdown sections (Added, Changed, Fixed, Removed) and rewrite each item as a concise, outcome-focused bullet:

  • One line per bullet
  • Merge related items where possible
  • Drop purely internal items that don't matter to end users
  • Keep the list to a reasonable length for a tweet (aim for 5-10 bullets max)
  • Use backticks for CLI commands, tool names, and code references
  • Focus on what the user gains, not implementation details

Step 3 — Identify external contributors

Scan release notes for attribution patterns like by [@username](https://github.com/username).

Extract GitHub usernames, then determine the repo owner:

gh api repos/<owner>/<repo> --jq '.owner.login'

Filter out:

  • The repo owner
  • Bot accounts (e.g. dependabot, github-actions)

The remaining usernames are external contributors.

Step 4 — Cross-reference X/Twitter handles

For each external contributor, run the multi-signal verification procedure documented in references/handle-verification.md.

Classify each result as high confidence or low confidence.

Step 5 — Compose the tweet

Assemble the tweet using the template and rules in references/tweet-format.md.

Output

Present two things to the user:

  1. The composed tweet text — ready to copy and post
  2. A confidence table — showing each contributor's GitHub handle, resolved X handle (if any), confidence level, and reasoning

Example confidence table:

GitHub X Handle Confidence Reasoning
@alice @alice_dev High GitHub twitter_username field set
@bob bob_codes Low Same handle exists on X but no corroborating signals
@charlie No X presence found

The user reviews everything and posts manually.

Weekly Installs
1
GitHub Stars
42
First Seen
8 days ago
Installed on
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