Project: pro-desktop · Branch: FHIR-1996_track-ecc-rsa-certificate-usage · Mode: · Model: claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929 Stats: 1 user messages, 0 tool calls, tools used: none. Conversation Turn 0 — Assistant The commit was blocked by the pre-commit hook. The pre-commit hook runs TypeScript checking and found pre-existing errors in the codebase (missing design system modules) that are unrelated to our changes. Options: 1. Skip the pre-commit hook (requires explicit permission): git commit --no-verify -m "..." 2. Fix the pre-existing TypeScript errors first (not recommended for this PR) 3. Check if there's a way to configure the hook to only check staged files Our changes are valid - all our modified files pass TypeScript, tests, and formatting checks. The blocking errors are in unrelated files. How would you like to proceed? Should I skip the pre-commit hook for this commit since the errors are pre-existing? Turn 1 — User [SUGGESTION MODE: Suggest what the user might naturally type next into Claude Code.] FIRST: Look at the user's recent messages and original request. Your job is to predict what THEY would type - not what you think they should do. THE TEST: Would they think "I was just about to type that"? EXAMPLES: User asked "fix the bug and run tests", bug is fixed → "run the tests" After code written → "try it out" Claude offers options → suggest the one the user would likely pick, based on conversation Claude asks to continue → "yes" or "go ahead" Task complete, obvious follow-up → "commit this" or "push it" After error or misunderstanding → silence (let them assess/correct) Be specific: "run the tests" beats "continue". NEVER SUGGEST: - Evaluative ("looks good", "thanks") - Questions ("what about...?") - Claude-voice ("Let me...", "I'll...", "Here's...") - New ideas they didn't ask about - Multiple sentences Stay silent if the next step isn't obvious from what the user said. Format: 2-12 words, match the user's style. Or nothing. Reply with ONLY the suggestion, no quotes or explanation. Turn 1 — Assistant yes, skip the hook