IMPORTANT: For those who are downvoting, yes, my entire comment is sarcasm, lol! Do not ever do anything like this in a shared repo, ever! If you actually do this in a shared repo, your access will likely be revoked the moment someone sane and competent realizes what you’re doing.
Addendum: In that alias, I would’ve used left angle bracket instead of cat, but apparently lemmy scrubs those. I even tried the entity for it, but no go for either.
That’s why I’ve got my IDE configured to make a commit and push for every single ctrl-s.
And one more thing, I’m not going to squash before my final PR.
EDIT:
For those of you interested, here’s my gitconfig alias to help with this workflow:
[alias] ctrl-s-commit-push="!f() { count=$(cat count.txt); git add .; git commit -m \"$(date): commit $count\"; git push;}; f"
IMPORTANT: For those who are downvoting, yes, my entire comment is sarcasm, lol! Do not ever do anything like this in a shared repo, ever! If you actually do this in a shared repo, your access will likely be revoked the moment someone sane and competent realizes what you’re doing.
Addendum: In that alias, I would’ve used left angle bracket instead of
cat
, but apparently lemmy scrubs those. I even tried the entity for it, but no go for either.Pure evil.
Combine that with my pre-push hook that runs linting and tests, which takes about 10 minutes, and you’re gonna have a good time
I’ve long ago disabled the tests and only run linting now, i’m not a machochist
Wouldn’t that mean you just have shit tons of commits? What about the commit message?
“Hit Ctrl-S”
Timestamp would suffice
That sounds just awful. But ok.