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Message definition (KBibTeX/Development)
For bugs or features that require multiple commits and where individual commits may break {{path|master}} or a release branch, so-called ''feature branches'' are used. These branches are supposed to track {{path|master}} (typical for features) or a release branch (typical for bugs). Branches for bugs are meant to be merged into the release branch where the bug was reported for as well as into the master branch (for future releases). Feature branches are merged into the master branch, in selected cases into releases branches where no release has been tagged yet, and only in rare cases back-ported to release branches with published releases. An example for a feature branch would be {{path|feature/zotero}}, which may contain the code for an improved Zotero support. Names for bug report-related branches are {{path|bugs/}}''bugsystemnumber'' (for example {{path|bugs/kde338375}}) , where ''bugsystem'' would be {{path|kde}} or the name of a Linux distribution and ''number'' the actual bug number. Feature branches start with {{path|feature/}} followed by a short descriptive name for this feature (all lowercase, no spaces). Merged branches will be delete after some time.

For bugs or features that require multiple commits and where individual commits may break master or a release branch, so-called feature branches are used. These branches are supposed to track master (typical for features) or a release branch (typical for bugs). Branches for bugs are meant to be merged into the release branch where the bug was reported for as well as into the master branch (for future releases). Feature branches are merged into the master branch, in selected cases into releases branches where no release has been tagged yet, and only in rare cases back-ported to release branches with published releases. An example for a feature branch would be feature/zotero, which may contain the code for an improved Zotero support. Names for bug report-related branches are bugs/bugsystemnumber (for example bugs/kde338375) , where bugsystem would be kde or the name of a Linux distribution and number the actual bug number. Feature branches start with feature/ followed by a short descriptive name for this feature (all lowercase, no spaces). Merged branches will be delete after some time.