Skip to content

DispatchesΒΆ

How to Write an Effective GitHub Pull Request Template

Most pull requests arrive with a title, a branch name, and nothing else. The reviewer is left to reverse-engineer the intent from the diff, hunt through linked issues that may or may not exist, and ask follow-up questions before they can even start. That back-and-forth is a tax on everyone's time, and it is almost entirely avoidable.

A pull request template shifts the burden upstream. It prompts contributors at the moment they open a pull request to provide the context that reviewers need: what changed, why it changed, whether it breaks anything, and what issue it resolves. Done well, a template makes the review faster, the history more useful, and the project easier to contribute to.

This post covers what a pull request template is, how to set one up in a GitHub repository, and how to write one that contributors will actually fill out.

Branching Out: GitHub Certification Path

GitHub Certifications Overview

GitHub offers five certifications that validate skills across the full breadth of the platform: Foundations, Actions, Copilot, Advanced Security, and Administration. I completed each of these last year and found each one to be a genuine challenge that pushed me to revisit corners of the platform I thought I already understood.

This post walks through each certification, what it covers, how to prepare, and where to find the best study resources.

Pinned Comments on GitHub Issues

GitHub shipped a small but meaningful feature for issue tracking in February 2026: the ability to pin a comment to the top of any issue. It addresses a problem that every active open source project runs into sooner or later: the signal-to-noise ratio in issue threads starts degrading at exactly the moment when the thread matters most.

Set Shared GitHub Defaults with a .github Repository

Every GitHub account, whether a personal profile or an organization with dozens of developers, eventually accumulates the same boilerplate problem. You add a CONTRIBUTING.md to one repository, a CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md to another, issue and pull request templates to a third, and none of them are consistent. When someone opens a new repository, they either copy files from an older one (hoping they are still current) or start from scratch.

GitHub has a solution to help set defaults: the .github repository. It is a specialized repository you create under your personal account or organization that acts as a default configuration layer for every repository that does not define its own. One place to maintain community health files, contribution guidelines, security policies, issue templates, and (for organizations) standardized workflow templates that appear in the Actions UI across every repository in the org.

This post covers what a .github repository is, what goes inside it, how to set one up, and an honest look at the benefits and the tradeoffs.