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authorAchilleas Pipinellis <axilleas@axilleas.me>2016-11-19 18:33:48 +0000
committerAchilleas Pipinellis <axilleas@axilleas.me>2016-11-19 18:33:48 +0000
commitcb7449594c21f828492b70269d063ad7f08886bd (patch)
tree39cdf4efa3f28569fcdb42e18a74731c34f1d2b2
parentecef3da450ba5ba06847579d01ef12a03e143af9 (diff)
parent625a86403d224918c607ae69593f2a7caaaf5bfb (diff)
downloadgitlab-ce-cb7449594c21f828492b70269d063ad7f08886bd.tar.gz
Merge branch 'fix-typo-in-gitlab-flow' into 'master'
Fix a typo in gitlab_flow.md ('munch'->'much') See merge request !7595
-rw-r--r--doc/workflow/gitlab_flow.md2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/workflow/gitlab_flow.md b/doc/workflow/gitlab_flow.md
index 2215f37b81a..c228ea72f22 100644
--- a/doc/workflow/gitlab_flow.md
+++ b/doc/workflow/gitlab_flow.md
@@ -279,7 +279,7 @@ The trick is to use the merge/pull request with multiple commits when your work
The commit message should reflect your intention, not the contents of the commit.
The contents of the commit can be easily seen anyway, the question is why you did it.
An example of a good commit message is: "Combine templates to dry up the user views.".
-Some words that are bad commit messages because they don't contain munch information are: change, improve and refactor.
+Some words that are bad commit messages because they don't contain much information are: change, improve and refactor.
The word fix or fixes is also a red flag, unless it comes after the commit sentence and references an issue number.
To see more information about the formatting of commit messages please see this great [blog post by Tim Pope](http://tbaggery.com/2008/04/19/a-note-about-git-commit-messages.html).