Merge bitcoin/bitcoin#23728: Use the imperative mood in example subject line

efde11161599deb6d98fb5773c3225d589bb14c2 Use the imperative mood in example subject line (Tobin Harding)

Pull request description:

  The section `Committing Patches` within `CONTIBUTING.md` contains an example commit subject line that violates rule seven of the linked guide to writing commit logs (Chris Beams famous blog post).

  We should practice what we preach, especially in examples :)

  Use the imperative mood in example commit message subject line.

ACKs for top commit:
  jarolrod:
    ACK efde11161599deb6d98fb5773c3225d589bb14c2
  shaavan:
    ACK efde11161599deb6d98fb5773c3225d589bb14c2

Tree-SHA512: f607951020c544a65df2fcb45f40f10d44bc761298d866ef3d3742c63ed21eed4e7a798c361f8449d05781c04133b60f0b78d4402a8235064953a817bb24c7d0
This commit is contained in:
MarcoFalke 2021-12-10 09:08:36 +01:00 committed by pasta
parent b1d3020568
commit 039357da7b

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@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ fixes or code moves with actual code changes.
Commit messages should be verbose by default consisting of a short subject line
(50 chars max), a blank line and detailed explanatory text as separate
paragraph(s), unless the title alone is self-explanatory (like "Corrected typo
paragraph(s), unless the title alone is self-explanatory (like "Correct typo
in init.cpp") in which case a single title line is sufficient. Commit messages should be
helpful to people reading your code in the future, so explain the reasoning for
your decisions. Further explanation [here](https://chris.beams.io/posts/git-commit/).