customaize-agent:create-hook
Create and configure git hooks with intelligent project analysis, suggestions, and automated testing
Install
mkdir -p .claude/skills/customaize-agent-create-hook-luicabref97 && curl -L -o skill.zip "https://agentskills.codes/api/skills/download/14571" && unzip -o skill.zip -d .claude/skills/customaize-agent-create-hook-luicabref97 && rm skill.zipInstalls to .claude/skills/customaize-agent-create-hook-luicabref97
Activation
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Create and configure git hooks with intelligent project analysis, suggestions, and automated testingAbout this skill
Create Hook Command
Analyze the project, suggest practical hooks, and create them with proper testing.
Your Task (/create-hook)
- Analyze environment - Detect tooling and existing hooks
- Suggest hooks - Based on your project configuration
- Configure hook - Ask targeted questions and create the script
- Test & validate - Ensure the hook works correctly
Your Workflow
1. Environment Analysis & Suggestions
Automatically detect the project tooling and suggest relevant hooks:
When TypeScript is detected (tsconfig.json):
- PostToolUse hook: "Type-check files after editing"
- PreToolUse hook: "Block edits with type errors"
When Prettier is detected (.prettierrc, prettier.config.js):
- PostToolUse hook: "Auto-format files after editing"
- PreToolUse hook: "Require formatted code"
When ESLint is detected (.eslintrc.*):
- PostToolUse hook: "Lint and auto-fix after editing"
- PreToolUse hook: "Block commits with linting errors"
When package.json has scripts:
testscript → "Run tests before commits"buildscript → "Validate build before commits"
When a git repository is detected:
- PreToolUse/Bash hook: "Prevent commits with secrets"
- PostToolUse hook: "Security scan on file changes"
Decision Tree:
Project has TypeScript? → Suggest type checking hooks
Project has formatter? → Suggest formatting hooks
Project has tests? → Suggest test validation hooks
Security sensitive? → Suggest security hooks
+ Scan for additional patterns and suggest custom hooks based on:
- Custom scripts in package.json
- Unique file patterns or extensions
- Development workflow indicators
- Project-specific tooling configurations
2. Hook Configuration
Start by asking: "What should this hook do?" and offer relevant suggestions from your analysis.
Then understand the context from the user's description and only ask about details you're unsure about:
-
Trigger timing: When should it run?
PreToolUse: Before file operations (can block)PostToolUse: After file operations (feedback/fixes)UserPromptSubmit: Before processing requests- Other event types as needed
-
Tool matcher: Which tools should trigger it? (
Write,Edit,Bash,*etc) -
Scope:
global,project, orproject-local -
Response approach:
- Exit codes only: Simple (exit 0 = success, exit 2 = block in PreToolUse)
- JSON response: Advanced control (blocking, context, decisions)
- Guide based on complexity: simple pass/fail → exit codes, rich feedback → JSON
-
Blocking behavior (if relevant): "Should this stop operations when issues are found?"
- PreToolUse: Can block operations (security, validation)
- PostToolUse: Usually provide feedback only
-
Claude integration (CRITICAL): "Should Claude Code automatically see and fix issues this hook detects?"
- If YES: Use
additionalContextfor error communication - If NO: Use
suppressOutput: truefor silent operation
- If YES: Use
-
Context pollution: "Should successful operations be silent to avoid noise?"
- Recommend YES for formatting, routine checks
- Recommend NO for security alerts, critical errors
-
File filtering: "What file types should this hook process?"
3. Hook Creation
You should:
- Create hooks directory:
~/.claude/hooks/or.claude/hooks/based on scope - Generate script: Create hook script with:
- Proper shebang and executable permissions
- Project-specific commands (use detected config paths)
- Comments explaining the hook's purpose
- Update settings: Add hook configuration to appropriate settings.json
- Use absolute paths: Avoid relative paths to scripts and executables. Use
$CLAUDE_PROJECT_DIRto reference project root - Offer validation: Ask if the user wants you to test the hook
Key Implementation Standards:
- Read JSON from stdin (never use argv)
- Use top-level
additionalContext/systemMessagefor Claude communication - Include
suppressOutput: truefor successful operations - Provide specific error counts and actionable feedback
- Focus on changed files rather than entire codebase
- Support common development workflows
⚠️ CRITICAL: Input/Output Format
This is where most hook implementations fail. Pay extra attention to:
- Input: Reading JSON from stdin correctly (not argv)
- Output: Using correct top-level JSON structure for Claude communication
- Documentation: Consulting official docs for exact schemas when in doubt
4. Testing & Validation
CRITICAL: Test both happy and sad paths:
Happy Path Testing:
- Test expected success scenario - Create conditions where hook should pass
- Examples: TypeScript (valid code), Linting (formatted code), Security (safe commands)
Sad Path Testing: 2. Test expected failure scenario - Create conditions where hook should fail/warn
- Examples: TypeScript (type errors), Linting (unformatted code), Security (dangerous operations)
Verification Steps: 3. Verify expected behavior: Check if it blocks/warns/provides context as intended
Example Testing Process:
- For a hook preventing file deletion: Create a test file, attempt the protected action, and verify the hook prevents it
If Issues Occur, you should:
- Check hook registration in settings
- Verify script permissions (
chmod +x) - Test with simplified version first
- Debug with detailed hook execution analysis
Hook Templates
Type Checking (PostToolUse)
#!/usr/bin/env node
// Read stdin JSON, check .ts/.tsx files only
// Run: npx tsc --noEmit --pretty
// Output: JSON with additionalContext for errors
Auto-formatting (PostToolUse)
#!/usr/bin/env node
// Read stdin JSON, check supported file types
// Run: npx prettier --write [file]
// Output: JSON with suppressOutput: true
Security Scanning (PreToolUse)
#!/bin/bash
# Read stdin JSON, check for secrets/keys
# Block if dangerous patterns found
# Exit 2 to block, 0 to continue
Complete templates available at: https://docs.claude.com/en/docs/claude-code/hooks#examples
Quick Reference
📖 Official Docs: https://docs.claude.com/en/docs/claude-code/hooks.md
Common Patterns:
- stdin input:
JSON.parse(process.stdin.read()) - File filtering: Check extensions before processing
- Success response:
{continue: true, suppressOutput: true} - Error response:
{continue: true, additionalContext: "error details"} - Block operation:
exit(2)in PreToolUse hooks
Hook Types by Use Case:
- Code Quality: PostToolUse for feedback and fixes
- Security: PreToolUse to block dangerous operations
- CI/CD: PreToolUse to validate before commits
- Development: PostToolUse for automated improvements
Hook Execution Best Practices:
- Hooks run in parallel according to official documentation
- Design for independence since execution order isn't guaranteed
- Plan hook interactions carefully when multiple hooks affect the same files
Success Criteria
✅ Hook created successfully when:
- Script has executable permissions
- Registered in correct settings.json
- Responds correctly to test scenarios
- Integrates properly with Claude for automated fixes
- Follows project conventions and detected tooling
Result: The user gets a working hook that enhances their development workflow with intelligent automation and quality checks.
Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://code.claude.com/docs/llms.txt Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Automate workflows with hooks
Run shell commands automatically when Claude Code edits files, finishes tasks, or needs input. Format code, send notifications, validate commands, and enforce project rules.
Hooks are user-defined shell commands that execute at specific points in Claude Code's lifecycle. They provide deterministic control over Claude Code's behavior, ensuring certain actions always happen rather than relying on the LLM to choose to run them. Use hooks to enforce project rules, automate repetitive tasks, and integrate Claude Code with your existing tools.
For decisions that require judgment rather than deterministic rules, you can also use prompt-based hooks or agent-based hooks that use a Claude model to evaluate conditions.
For other ways to extend Claude Code, see skills for giving Claude additional instructions and executable commands, subagents for running tasks in isolated contexts, and plugins for packaging extensions to share across projects.
<Tip> This guide covers common use cases and how to get started. For full event schemas, JSON input/output formats, and advanced features like async hooks and MCP tool hooks, see the [Hooks reference](/en/hooks). </Tip>Set up your first hook
The fastest way to create a hook is through the /hooks interactive menu in Claude Code. This walkthrough creates a desktop notification hook, so you get alerted whenever Claude is waiting for your input instead of watching the terminal.
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