Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

The 2% of cases when you need the commit log (or more importantly: someone else who inherits your code...) justifies writing good messages imho.

If you make a change to your codebase, normally you know what you want to achieve and why (otherwise... what are you even doing?). A commit message is just putting that in writing... that only takes a few seconds, often less than it takes to write the code.

So it's just a good habit to have. It forces you to think more about the changes you do & why, so it makes you a better software developer. Creating any new habit always takes some energy initially, but it's worth it.



You know prisoners dilemma - if we even never meet at all it makes even more sense for me to cut the corners.

If we work together for years it makes sense to cooperate.

Unfortunately most IT projects are set up in a way where you do it for 2 years and then you will never ever work on it again.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: