- You are only a Kontributor when Its a KDE repository. 
- When they reject your PR because you still managed to slip in a bug - If it involves pointers, not unlikely. 
 
- I knew a guy who boasted about the number of repositories he created on Github. Said he created over four thousand. - I took a look. He did in fact sit down and create over 4,000 different, unique repositories. Each with a README and some slight variation on a few lines of code. That’s some kind of dedication, I guess? - Was he a Go developer before generics? Published 4000 versions of the library, one for each type. - No, it was mostly short bash/python/php scripts. 
 
- Maybe he automated it? - And maybe he published it on GitHub? - That’d be funny. Seeing - mass-repo-creatorand then 4000 random repositories below it.
 
 
- And your typo fix kickstarts 10 workflows, downloading gigabytes of data and running endless tests. - Depending on the size of the project, this may be an environmental concern. - When your PR to replace one line of code actively contributes to climate change. 
- Using legacy SI units for size of information is deprecated, they only bring confusion, instead use IEC/binary units like GiB (gibibyte). https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix 
 
- Legendary o7 
 
- Most of my PRs are fixing typos in the Readmes 8) It ain’t much, but it’s honest work 
- I once fixed a CVE by removing a line. And, IIRC, my only contribution to openssl is a single-character one. 
- I saw the other day a profile full of PRs, all diffs were changes from passing code through an autoformater. 
- Typing characters is maybe 1% of the job. The other 99% is understanding how the change affects everything else. Changing a single line of code in a function called by 1000 other functions each themselves called in 10 other functions can still potentially be more work and a bigger change than changing 9000 lines of code in a function called once. 
- I once fixed a bug in credit card payment form because someone had gotten some formatting character screwed up and used a capital M in some place where a lower case m should have been. Since it was a payment system they couldn’t take payment for a while whilst that was screwed up. I was contracting there and happened to notice it. Sometimes all it takes is one character. 
- In my developer career, the littlest commit I did was the removal of a single ‘;’ which was causing a wonderful to debug bug ;) 
- @LostXOR I dunno, I appreciate not having broken links in documentation. No MR is too small, unless the person “contributing” starts bragging about “I contribute to X project.” Then that’s pretty obnoxious. - Yeah I suppose it’s more than a “minor problem”. Still feels weird making such a small PR lol. 
 










