I am a creative, passionate, full stack web developer. I love technology! Currently I'm really into Node & React but I am very experienced in PHP, Drupal 8, accessibility, CI/CD #WomenWhoCode
Interesting use case. So you're merging all of your pull requests commits into one commit. I can see that this makes the history cleaner. I personally like to keep that commit history in projects, especially for a big merge. It makes it easier to step back to a more specific point in the future after the merge. I can definitely see the benefits though :)
One of the most salient features of our Tech Hiring culture is that there is so much bullshit. Everyone knows this. Each of us contributes his share. But we tend to take the situation for granted.
On GitHub you can do the same thing with merge and squash the commits.
The history in master is kept clean but you have a link to the pull request to see the details
I am a creative, passionate, full stack web developer. I love technology! Currently I'm really into Node & React but I am very experienced in PHP, Drupal 8, accessibility, CI/CD #WomenWhoCode
Yeah it definitely makes sense, especially if you do lots of tiny commits then you would clutter the main branch :) I guess there is a balancing act though as to leaving enough commits to be able to cherry pick certain functionality in future (rather than looking at a pull request and manually doing things)
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
Interesting use case. So you're merging all of your pull requests commits into one commit. I can see that this makes the history cleaner. I personally like to keep that commit history in projects, especially for a big merge. It makes it easier to step back to a more specific point in the future after the merge. I can definitely see the benefits though :)
On GitHub you can do the same thing with merge and squash the commits.
The history in master is kept clean but you have a link to the pull request to see the details
Yeah it definitely makes sense, especially if you do lots of tiny commits then you would clutter the main branch :) I guess there is a balancing act though as to leaving enough commits to be able to cherry pick certain functionality in future (rather than looking at a pull request and manually doing things)