fix: correct flexibility typo

* fix: correct flexibility typo

* fix: correct flexibility typo
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Steven 2021-06-09 08:45:42 -04:00 committed by GitHub
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commit cf1d0ae8e4
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2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -177,7 +177,7 @@ A common workflow for this is to have your git system automatically squash commi
Reverting code can be complicated: are you reverting multiple commits? if you revert a feature, should the next release instead be a patch? Reverting code can be complicated: are you reverting multiple commits? if you revert a feature, should the next release instead be a patch?
Conventional Commits does not make an explicit effort to define revert behavior. Instead we leave it to tooling Conventional Commits does not make an explicit effort to define revert behavior. Instead we leave it to tooling
authors to use the flexility of _types_ and _footers_ to develop their logic for handling reverts. authors to use the flexibility of _types_ and _footers_ to develop their logic for handling reverts.
One recommendation is to use the `revert` type, and a footer that references the commit SHAs that are being reverted: One recommendation is to use the `revert` type, and a footer that references the commit SHAs that are being reverted:

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@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ A common workflow for this is to have your git system automatically squash commi
Reverting code can be complicated: are you reverting multiple commits? if you revert a feature, should the next release instead be a patch? Reverting code can be complicated: are you reverting multiple commits? if you revert a feature, should the next release instead be a patch?
Conventional Commits does not make an explicit effort to define revert behavior. Instead we leave it to tooling Conventional Commits does not make an explicit effort to define revert behavior. Instead we leave it to tooling
authors to use the flexility of _types_ and _footers_ to develop their logic for handling reverts. authors to use the flexibility of _types_ and _footers_ to develop their logic for handling reverts.
One recommendation is to use the `revert` type, and a footer that references the commit SHAs that are being reverted: One recommendation is to use the `revert` type, and a footer that references the commit SHAs that are being reverted: