... | ... | @@ -338,7 +338,10 @@ So, you make your lovely patch, it all looks good, so you record it. Then you do |
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The same is available for Git. The command is called `git commit --amend`. You usually checkout the commit you want to edit into a branch, do the changes, then rebase the remaining patches on top of this. Example coming soon...
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I can't find a way to do this directly with Mercurial. You can of course do `hg rollback` and then add a new commit. The Mercurial Queues extension is also able to do this (hg qrefresh) but it is rather complicated to use.
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I can't find a way to do this directly with Mercurial. You can of course do `hg rollback` and then add a new commit. The Mercurial Queues extension is also able to do this (`hg qrefresh`) but it is rather complicated to use.
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It doesn't appear to be possible with Bzr either. You have to do `bzr uncommit` and then `bzr commit`, similarly to Mercurial.
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### File renames
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