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by Etheryte
496 days ago
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In my experience, most of the value in commit messages isn't in rolling back and such, but in trying to understand history. At day job, I work on a product where some of the code is around two decades old, so you bet there's no one around who you could ask about it. Many of the problems that were solved at the time are solved for free out of the box with modern tooling, but you won't know if that's the case unless you know what problem a commit was fixing to begin with. You can read the diff, yes, but it won't tell you the why and that's what commit messages are for. |
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