From: Felix C. Stegerman Date: Mon, 10 Aug 2015 15:31:28 +0000 (+0200) Subject: hacking-howto: re-word branches info X-Git-Tag: 4.11~49^2 X-Git-Url: https://git.sur5r.net/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=c827b5cb477bbec8391a4daebc9fccad6f3f6227;p=i3%2Fi3 hacking-howto: re-word branches info fixes #1836 --- diff --git a/docs/hacking-howto b/docs/hacking-howto index e6313f7d..d6e2b67e 100644 --- a/docs/hacking-howto +++ b/docs/hacking-howto @@ -982,14 +982,16 @@ could have a look at previous reviews and see what the common mistakes are. === Which branch to use? -Work on i3 generally happens in two branches: “master” and “next”. Since -“master” is what people get when they check out the git repository, its -contents are always stable. That is, it contains the source code of the latest -release, plus any bugfixes that were applied since that release. +Work on i3 generally happens in two branches: “master” and “next” (the latter +being the default branch, the one that people get when they check out the git +repository). + +The contents of “master” are always stable. That is, it contains the source code +of the latest release, plus any bugfixes that were applied since that release. New features are only found in the “next” branch. Therefore, if you are working -on a new feature, use the “next” branch. If you are working on a bugfix, use -the “next” branch, too, but make sure your code also works on “master”. +on a new feature, use the “next” branch. If you are working on a bugfix, use the +“next” branch, too, but make sure your code also works on “master”. == Thought experiments