this post was submitted on 11 Feb 2024
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Programming

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 7 months ago

It depends on your intent. If you're doing it to keep history clean and linear in the long term, it's a huge waste of time as it gets splatted into a single squashed merge commit. It also makes it difficult for reviewers to rereview your changes as GitHub/Lab can't calculate the diff because you keep moving the goalposts with force pushes.

If you're doing it for cleanliness on your local branch then I guess that's fine, but I find it anti-social in a multi participant repo.