Claude-code-plugins-plus navigating-github

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/productivity/navigating-github/skills/navigating-github" ~/.claude/skills/jeremylongshore-claude-code-plugins-plus-navigating-github && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: plugins/productivity/navigating-github/skills/navigating-github/SKILL.md
source content

Navigating GitHub

First-time GitHub setup and interactive git learning. Get set up, then learn by doing.

Table of Contents

  1. Overview — 2. Prerequisites — 3. Instructions — 4. Modes — 5. Examples — 6. Output — 7. Resources

Overview

Problem: Getting started with GitHub is the #1 barrier for people building with AI. Beginners stall at setup, don't understand commits vs pushes vs PRs, and have nobody to walk them through it hands-on. AI coding tools can run git commands, but they don't teach you what those commands mean or guide you through setup from scratch.

Solution: Walk users through GitHub setup step by step, then teach git and GitHub through 9 progressive hands-on lessons on their actual project. Every lesson uses do-then-explain: run the command, see the result, then understand why. Adapts language and depth to skill level automatically.

Prerequisites

  • Terminal access with
    git
    installed
  • gh
    CLI installed (Setup handles installation if missing)
  • GitHub account (Setup handles creation if missing)

Instructions

Step 1 — Route

Determine mode from the user's request. Act immediately — no preamble.

  1. No
    .git/
    directory OR
    gh auth status
    fails → Setup (check with
    test -d .git
    and
    gh auth status
    )
  2. Keywords "teach", "learn", "what are", "how do", "explain", "lesson" → Learn
  3. Keywords "set up", "new repo", "init", "get started" → Setup
  4. Generic ("help me with github") → check environment, route to Setup if no repo, otherwise offer lesson menu

Step 2 — Infer Skill Level

Each mode runs

git status
as part of its normal operation. Infer level from those signals — no extra commands:

  • Only
    main
    branch + short/vague commit messages → Beginner
  • A few branches + descriptive commits → Intermediate
  • Branch naming conventions + conventional commits → Advanced
  • Complex history, multiple remotes, CI configured → Expert

Only ask via

AskUserQuestion
when signals are genuinely ambiguous. Read
${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/skill-assessment-guide.md
for the full adaptive behavior matrix. Apply:

LevelLanguageDepthAutonomy
BeginnerAnalogies, zero jargonExplain everythingExecute and teach along the way
IntermediateLight jargon, define termsExplain the whyExecute, ask to confirm
AdvancedStandard vocabularyBrief rationale onlySuggest, let user decide
ExpertTerse, technicalNone unless askedAssist only

Modes

Setup — Guided Onboarding

The core experience for first-time users. Walk through each step interactively, skipping anything already done. Run each check, explain what it means, fix what's missing.

Sequence: Check

gh auth status
→ install
gh
if missing (detect OS, give command) → run
gh auth login
(walk through browser OAuth) → check
git config user.name
and
user.email
(set if missing) → check for
.git/
(run
git init
if missing) → generate
.gitignore
by detected project type → create first commit → run
gh repo create
(let user choose public/private) → push → show the repo URL.

Skip completed steps. Explain each step at the inferred level. After completion, offer the lesson menu: "Repo is set up. Say 'teach me github' or run

/github-learn
to start learning."

Learn — Interactive Curriculum

Hands-on lessons using real commands on the user's actual project. Every lesson follows do-then-explain: run a real command, observe the result, THEN explain what happened. Verify understanding after each step before proceeding.

Read

${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/learning-curriculum.md
for the full curriculum. Route by trigger:

Beginner track:

  • "teach me github" / "learn github" → GitHub 101 — commits, push, the basics
  • "what are branches" / "teach me branches" → Branching Basics — create, switch, see the difference
  • "teach me PRs" → Your First PR — branch, push, create PR, merge

Intermediate track:

  • "teach me branching strategies" → Branch Workflows — naming, feature branches, staying current
  • "teach me code review" → PR Review Flow — review, comment, approve
  • "how do I collaborate" → Team Git — forks, upstream sync, co-authoring

Advanced track:

  • "teach me rebase" → Rebase vs Merge — interactive rebase, squash, clean history
  • "teach me CI/CD" / "github actions" → GitHub Actions — write a workflow, watch it run
  • "how do code review apps work" → Review Ecosystem — CodeRabbit, Copilot Review, and the ecosystem (read
    ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/github-review-apps.md
    )

After each lesson: summarize what was learned (2-3 bullets), give a small challenge to try solo, suggest the next lesson.

Teaching rules:

  • Run commands one at a time, explain after each result
  • If the user makes a mistake, fix it together — mistakes are learning moments
  • If the user already knows something, skip ahead
  • If the user seems confused, slow down and simplify
  • Create a safe practice branch before exercises that modify the repo
  • Never push to
    main
    /
    master
    during lessons — always branch first
  • Never commit secrets — check for
    .env
    , API keys before staging

Examples

Setup (no .git, no auth):

User: "help me with github"
Agent: [checks — no .git, gh not authenticated]
Agent: "Starting from scratch. First, connect to GitHub..."
Agent: [walks through gh auth login, git config, git init, gh repo create]
Agent: "Repo is live at github.com/user/project. Run /github-learn to
       start learning commits and branches."

Learn (beginner, GitHub 101):

User: "teach me github"
Agent: "Make a small change to any file — add a comment, fix a typo."
User: [edits a file]
Agent: "Now save that change: git add README.md"
Agent: "That moved the change to the staging area — like putting a letter
       in an envelope. Now seal it: git commit -m 'Update README'"
Agent: [verifies understanding before moving to next step]

Learn (advanced, rebase):

User: "/github-learn rebase"
Agent: "Create a branch with 3 small commits, then we'll squash them."
Agent: [guides through git rebase -i, explains pick/squash/fixup]

Output

Calibrate all output to the inferred skill level. Beginner: plain English with analogies, explain every command. Intermediate: concise summaries, explain rationale. Advanced: minimal commentary. Expert: raw output only. Read

${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/git-concepts-glossary.md
when a term definition is needed.

Error Handling

  • gh
    not installed
    : Detect missing CLI, provide platform-specific install instructions (
    brew install gh
    ,
    apt install gh
    ,
    winget install GitHub.cli
    ), then resume setup.
  • Authentication failure: If
    gh auth status
    fails, walk through
    gh auth login
    with browser OAuth flow. If token is expired, run
    gh auth refresh
    .
  • No git remote: If
    git remote -v
    returns empty, guide through
    gh repo create
    or
    git remote add origin <url>
    .
  • Merge conflict during lesson: Explain what a conflict is at the user's level, show the conflict markers, and walk through resolution step by step.
  • Detached HEAD: Detect with
    git status
    , explain in plain language, and recover with
    git checkout <branch>
    .

Resources

  • ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/learning-curriculum.md
    — 9 progressive lesson plans from beginner through advanced
  • ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/git-concepts-glossary.md
    — term definitions at beginner and technical levels
  • ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/skill-assessment-guide.md
    — adaptive behavior matrix with level-up and level-down signals
  • ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/safety-rules.md
    — branch protection, secret detection, destructive operation guards
  • ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/error-recovery-playbook.md
    — conflict resolution, auth repair, detached HEAD, rebase recovery
  • ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/github-review-apps.md
    — CodeRabbit, Copilot Review, Greptile, CodeQL, Qodo
  • ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/claude-github-platforms.md
    — platform capabilities across Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, and others