+[2019-12-02T21:58:15Z]InteloHi +[2019-12-02T21:58:47Z]InteloIf I have 2 branches. 2nd branch is ahead with 10 commits. If I merge back in 1st branch, can I just show ONE commit in 1st branch after merge rather than 10? I mean that 1 commit will have all data of those 10 commits (the diff)? So those 10 commits do not ever show in the 1st branch +[2019-12-02T22:06:53Z]tang^look up git merge squash +[2019-12-02T22:07:02Z]tang^!squash +[2019-12-02T22:07:13Z]Intelothanks
BtbN I need an example, I don't know how to implement such a workflow
+[2019-12-03T02:02:31Z]OnkelTemHi folks. I wonder is there any statistics about at what degree GitHub is a cemetary of dead projects? +[2019-12-03T02:50:57Z]nedbatOnkelTem: define "dead" +[2019-12-03T02:51:28Z]nedbatOnkelTem: and also, what would it mean if it were? +[2019-12-03T03:22:30Z]nateOnkelTem: Considering all the private repos, probably not +[2019-12-03T03:23:06Z]nateOr at minimum even factoring them it would probably skew results a lot for people who setup repos for future plans but don't end up doing anything with it