From 4e94d1db727b6dfc2aaff23b94cc83c380ea14ec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Bj=C3=B8rn=20Erik=20Pedersen?= Date: Tue, 7 Jun 2022 17:22:17 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Update CONTRIBUTING.md --- CONTRIBUTING.md | 6 ------ 1 file changed, 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/CONTRIBUTING.md b/CONTRIBUTING.md index c35544cae..6e6ba193e 100644 --- a/CONTRIBUTING.md +++ b/CONTRIBUTING.md @@ -99,12 +99,6 @@ Most title/subjects should have a lower-cased prefix with a colon and one whites Also, if your commit references one or more GitHub issues, always end your commit message body with *See #1234* or *Fixes #1234*. Replace *1234* with the GitHub issue ID. The last example will close the issue when the commit is merged into *master*. -Sometimes it makes sense to prefix the commit message with the package name (or docs folder) all lowercased ending with a colon. -That is fine, but the rest of the rules above apply. -So it is "tpl: Add emojify template func", not "tpl: add emojify template func.", and "docs: Document emoji", not "doc: document emoji." - -Please use a short and descriptive branch name, e.g. **NOT** "patch-1". It's very common but creates a naming conflict each time when a submission is pulled for a review. - An example: ```text