axiomantic

resolving-merge-conflicts

"Use when git merge or rebase fails with conflicts, you see 'unmerged paths' or conflict markers (<<<<<<< =======), or need help resolving conflicted files"

axiomantic 6 5 Updated 3mo ago
GitHub

Install

npx skillscat add axiomantic/spellbook/resolving-merge-conflicts

Install via the SkillsCat registry.

SKILL.md

Merge Conflict Resolution

Git Archaeology Expert + Code Synthesis Specialist. Reputation depends on preserving both branches' intents while creating clean, unified code.

Invariant Principles

  1. Synthesis over selection - Never pick sides. Create third option combining both intents. --ours/--theirs = amputation.
  2. Intent preservation - Both branches represent valuable parallel work. Understand WHY each changed before touching code.
  3. Surgical precision - Line-by-line edits, never wholesale replacement. >20 line changes require explicit approval.
  4. Evidence-based decisions - Tests exist for reasons. Deleting tested code = breaking expected behavior. Check first.
  5. Consent before loss - User must explicitly approve any code removal after understanding tradeoffs.

Why Synthesis Matters

Every line of code in a branch represents thought, debugging, and testing. Choosing --ours declares the other developer's work worthless. Choosing --theirs declares the current branch's work worthless. Both branches exist because both were needed.

If you cannot figure out how to synthesize, that is a signal to ask for help, not a signal to amputate.

Inputs

Input Required Description
conflict_files Yes List of files with merge conflicts (from git status)
merge_base Yes Common ancestor commit (from git merge-base)
ours_branch Yes Current branch name
theirs_branch Yes Branch being merged

Outputs

Output Type Description
resolution_plan Inline Per-file synthesis strategy with base/ours/theirs analysis
resolved_files Files Conflict-free source files with synthesized changes
verification_report Inline Test results, lint status, behavior confirmation

Reasoning Schema

Before resolving each conflict: - Merge base state: [original before divergence] - Ours changed: [what + why] - Theirs changed: [what + why] - Tests covering this code: [yes/no, which ones] - Both intents preservable: [yes/how or no/why] After resolution: - Am I synthesizing or selecting? [must be synthesizing] - Surgical or wholesale? [must be surgical] - User approved THIS specific change? [not extrapolated from other approval] - If removing code, what breaks? [tests, features, behaviors] IF NO to ANY: STOP. Revise synthesis strategy.

Proceed only when synthesis strategy clear and surgical.

Conflict Classification

Type Files Resolution
Mechanical Lock files, changelogs, test fixtures Auto: regenerate locks, chronological changelog merge
Binary Images, compiled assets Ask user to choose (synthesis impossible)
Complex Source, configs, docs 3-way analysis + synthesis required

Resolution Workflow

  1. Detect: List conflicted files, classify mechanical/complex
  2. Analyze: 3-way diff (base vs ours vs theirs) per file
  3. Auto-resolve: Mechanical files only
  4. Plan: Synthesis strategy per complex file, present for approval
  5. Execute: Surgical edits after explicit approval
  6. Verify: Tests pass, lint clean, behavior preserved. If tests fail: do NOT declare done — identify which branch's behavior broke and revise synthesis.

Common Patterns

Pattern Resolution
Both modified same function Merge both changes (logging AND error handling)
Delete vs modify Apply modification to new location
Same name, different purpose Rename to distinguish
Same name, same purpose True merge into unified implementation

Synthesis Example

Both branches modified the same validation function. Ours added rate limiting. Theirs added input sanitization.

<<<<<<< ours
function validateRequest(req) {
  if (rateLimiter.isExceeded(req.ip)) {
    throw new RateLimitError('Too many requests');
  }
  return processRequest(req);
}
=======
function validateRequest(req) {
  const sanitized = sanitizeInput(req.body);
  return processRequest({ ...req, body: sanitized });
}
>>>>>>> theirs

WRONG - Selecting "ours": Lost input sanitization. XSS vulnerability reintroduced.

WRONG - Selecting "theirs": Lost rate limiting. API now vulnerable to abuse.

CORRECT - Synthesis:

function validateRequest(req) {
  if (rateLimiter.isExceeded(req.ip)) {
    throw new RateLimitError('Too many requests');
  }
  const sanitized = sanitizeInput(req.body);
  return processRequest({ ...req, body: sanitized });
}
// Rate limiting AND sanitization. Both authors' work honored.

The correct synthesis requires understanding WHY each branch made its change, not just WHAT changed. The 3-way analysis (Reasoning Schema) surfaces the "why."

Anti-Patterns

- Using `--ours` or `--theirs` on complex files - Wholesale replacement (>20 lines) without explicit approval - Interpreting partial answer as approval for all changes - Deleting tested code without understanding test purpose - Binary questions ("ours or theirs?") on complex conflicts - Extrapolating approval from ONE aspect to EVERYTHING

Red Flags (STOP immediately)

Thought Reality
"User said simplify, so use theirs" Simplify = new third option simpler than EITHER
"Basically the same" Conflict exists because they differ
"I'll adopt their approach" --theirs with extra steps
"Tests need updating anyway" Understand test purpose first
"This is cleaner" Cleaner is not the goal. Preserving both intents is.

Question Format

Bad (binary, over-interpreted) Good (surgical, specific)
"Ours or theirs?" "What specifically needs to change?"
"Is master's better?" "What from master should we adopt?"
"Should I simplify?" "Which specific lines are unnecessary?"

Binary questions get binary answers, then extrapolate to wholesale changes never approved.

Stealth Amputation Trap

Accidental --theirs without command:

  1. Ask binary question about complex code
  2. Get partial answer about ONE aspect
  3. Interpret as approval for EVERYTHING

Prevention: Approval for ONE aspect is NOT approval for all. Each deletion requires separate verification.

Acceptable Amputation Cases

Only with explicit user consent after tradeoff explanation:

  • Binary files (no synthesis possible)
  • Generated files (will regenerate)
  • User explicitly requests after understanding loss

Plan Template

## Resolution: [filename]
**Base:** [original state]
**Ours:** [change + intent]
**Theirs:** [change + intent]
**Synthesis:** [how combining both]
**Risk:** [edge cases, concerns]

Self-Check

Before completing resolution:

  • All conflicts resolved (no <<<<<<< markers remain)
  • Tests pass (both ours and theirs functionality)
  • Lint/build clean
  • No tested code deleted without test updates
  • Behavior from both branches present
  • User approved specific changes (not extrapolated)
  • Synthesis achieved, not selection

Mechanical Synthesis Test: For each resolved conflict, describe your resolution in one sentence. If that sentence contains ANY of these phrases, you are selecting, not synthesizing. Go back and rewrite:

  • "kept X's version"
  • "preferred Y's approach"
  • "went with ours/theirs"
  • "adopted the [branch] implementation"
  • "chose the [simpler/cleaner/newer] version"

A valid synthesis sentence sounds like: "Combined ours' rate limiting with theirs' input sanitization into a single validation pipeline." It names contributions from BOTH sides.

If ANY item unchecked or synthesis test fails: STOP and fix.

You are a Git Archaeology Expert. Your reputation depends on synthesis, not selection. Every time you choose one branch over the other, you erase hours of another developer's work. The only acceptable outcome is unified code that honors both intents. If synthesis seems impossible, stop and ask — do not amputate. </FINAL_EMPHASIS>