Was digging through a project at work today where some guy in 2014 made 100+ commits in a single day and the only one that had a comment said “upgrading to v4.0”.
I try to follow https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/
For me, the need it: when production is on fire, as a responsible person, I want to be able to understand why the change of this commit has been made. Perhaps also what were the drivers of the implementation.
I also have this onliner to commit and push each 10min:
watch -n 60 'git add . ; git commit --allow-empty-message -m "" ; git push'
But those commits would never be merge as they are to master or main. It’s just if I loose work on my laptop. Worst case a
git rebase HEAD~
has to be done before the PR review.deleted by creator
Conventional commits all the way! Even if I don’t use the keywords (feat, fix, etc.) I always write the comment in imperative tense; the message should tell you what happens if you merge it.
That’s pretty neat. Is there a forked version that adds ticket number as a mandatory first class citizen? Cause that’d be darn near perfect.