#git bot interface
History of !sausage_making
- Some developers like to "hide the sausage making", transforming their commits before presenting them to the outside world. See http://sethrobertson.github.io/GitBestPractices/#sausage and !perfect
By canton7 at 2022-01-26 14:46:30
- Some developers like to "hide the sausage making", transforming their commits before presenting them to the outside world. See http://sethrobertson.github.com/GitBestPractices/#sausage and !perfect
By eugenekay at 2012-07-17 19:07:31
- Some developers like to "hide the sausage making?, transforming their commits presenting them to the outside world. See http://sethrobertson.github.com/GitBestPractices/#sausage and !perfect
By eugenekay at 2012-07-17 19:06:59
- Some developers like to hide the sausage making (pretend to the outside world that their commits sprung full-formed in utter perfection into their git repository). `git rebase -i`, `git add -p`, and `git reset -p` can fix commits up in post-production by splitting different concepts, merging fixes to older commits, etc. See also http://sethrobertson.github.com/GitBestPractices/#sausage and !perfect for how.
By frogonwheels at 2012-06-16 02:39:03
- Some developers like to hide the sausage making (pretend to the outside world that their commits sprung full-formed in utter perfection into their git repository). `git rebase -i`, `git add -p`, and `git reset -p` can fix commits up in post-production by splitting different concepts, merging fixes to older commits, etc. See also http://sethrobertson.github.com/GitBestPractices/#sausage
By SethRobertson at 2012-02-07 15:32:24
- Some developers like to hide the sausage making, or in other words, pretend to the outside world that their commits sprung full-formed in utter perfection into their git repository. `git rebase -i`, `git add -p`, and `git reset -p` can fix commits up in post-production by splitting different concepts, merging fixes to older commits, etc. See also https://gist.github.com/1540906#sausage
By SethRobertson at 2012-01-17 23:51:03
- Some developers like to hide the sausage making, or in other words, pretend to the outside world that their commits sprung full-formed in utter perfection into their git repository. `git rebase -i`, `git add -p`, and `git reset -p` can fix commits up in post-production by splitting different concepts, merging fixes to older commits, etc. See also TopGit and StGit.
By SethRobertson at 2011-12-16 20:12:27