# `git blame` master ignore list. # # This file contains a list of git hashes of revisions to be ignored # by `git blame`. These revisions are considered "unimportant" in # that they are unlikely to be what you are interested in when blaming. # They are typically expected to be formatting-only changes. # # It can be used for `git blame` using `--ignore-revs-file` or by # setting `blame.ignoreRevsFile` in the `git config`[1]. # # Ignore these commits when reporting with blame. Calling # # git blame --ignore-revs-file .git-blame-ignore-revs # # will tell `git blame` to ignore changes made by these revisions when # assigning blame, as if the change never happened. # # You can enable this as a default for your local repository by # running # # git config blame.ignoreRevsFile .git-blame-ignore-revs # # This will probably be automatically picked by your IDE # (VSCode+GitLens and JetBrains products are confirmed to do this). # # Important: if you are switching to a branch without this file, # `git blame` will fail with an error. # # GitHub also excludes the commits listed below from its "Blame" # views[2][3]. # # [1]: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-blame#Documentation/git-blame.txt-blameignoreRevsFile # [2]: https://github.blog/changelog/2022-03-24-ignore-commits-in-the-blame-view-beta/ # [3]: https://docs.github.com/en/repositories/working-with-files/using-files/viewing-a-file#ignore-commits-in-the-blame-view # # Guidelines: # - Only large (generally automated) reformatting or renaming PRs # should be added to this list. Do not put things here just because # you feel they are trivial or unimportant. If in doubt, do not put # it on this list. # - When adding a single revision, use a comment on top of the line # to link relevant issue/PR. Alternatively, paste the commit title # instead. # Example: # # https://github.com/sanitizers/octomachinery/issues/1 # d4a8b7307acc2dc8a8833ccfa65426ad28b3ffc9 # - When adding multiple revisions (like a bulk of work over many # commits), organize them in blocks. Precede each such block with a # comment starting with the word "START", followed by a link to the # relevant issue or PR. Add a similar comment after the last block # line but use the word "END", followed by the same link. # Alternatively, add or augment the link with a text motivation and # description of work performed in each commit. # Before each individual commit in the block, add an inline comment # with the commit title line. # Example: # # START https://github.com/sanitizers/octomachinery/issues/1 # # Bulk-replace smile emojis with unicorns # 6f0bd2d8a1e6cd2e794cd39976e9756e0c85ac66 # # Replace double with single quotes # d53974df11dbc22cbea9dc7dcbc9896c25979a27 # ... # # END https://github.com/sanitizers/octomachinery/issues/1 # - Only put full 40-character hashes on this list (not short hashes # or any other revision reference). # - Append to the bottom of the file, regardless of the chronological # order of the revisions. Revisions within blocks should be in # chronological order from oldest to newest. # - Because you must use a hash, you need to append to this list in a # follow-up PR to the actual reformatting PR that you are trying to # ignore. This approach helps avoid issues with arbitrary rebases # and squashes while the pull request is in progress. # 💅 Format typing & python modules 61c6f6d80f209116edabfd745f3175d4a0c8538d # 👺 Please the formatter @ `tests/conftest.py` 568144732ac023f8629510939c5470fec3440e68 # 👺 Format `gen_pickles.py` and `test_istr.py` 0a27de369f963cf4b233d2f898ebb7898267acf7