Yes, as a mater of fact, I do. And when me, or one of the other developers marks a bug as fix-committed, then the fix has been committed. And when that is released, the bug gets marked as fix-released.
See, these are actual words, not made up combinations of letters. And as such, they have a meaning. And the definition of committed, in the context of SCM, is that something has been added to the repository. And the definition of a release is that there is a binary build or package available for users to download.
Yes, as a mater of fact, I do. And when me, or one of the other developers marks a bug as fix-committed, then the fix has been committed. And when that is released, the bug gets marked as fix-released.
See, these are actual words, not made up combinations of letters. And as such, they have a meaning. And the definition of committed, in the context of SCM, is that something has been added to the repository. And the definition of a release is that there is a binary build or package available for users to download.
I hope you've learned something today.