Some projects teams throw a small office party for major releases - so why not for 1000th commit? 1000th commit is a good marker, usually project has progressed quite nicely by that time.

Do you celebrate or give any extra attention to such 'magic number' commits?

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Reall? Do you throw parties? Great question... – jjnguy Jan 13 '09 at 15:26
In my previous project there was a beer reward for dev who committed the 1000th – Petteri Hietavirta Jan 13 '09 at 15:27
Personally, I think should be re-opened - it's not that out of bounds, surely? – Kieron Jan 13 '09 at 15:33
I don't see why this isn't programming related... it's something we all do. – Omar Kooheji Jan 13 '09 at 15:33
We all poop too. – EBGreen Jan 13 '09 at 15:34
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closed as not constructive by Felix Kling, Bill the Lizard May 1 at 13:05

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8 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

We had a race to reach the 10,000th bug in bugzilla. The QA guys went into overdrive it was great.

Luckilly it the 10,000th bug wasn't in the product I was workign on...

I think magic number goals can be quite motivating, I think we've noticed the 1,00th and 2,000th comit, but nothing special came of it.

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Here's a twist, throw a party but the dev who makes the 1000 commit has to buy the beer

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Haha, yeah, nice one. :) – Bombe Jan 13 '09 at 15:34
Rev.999 = Code freeze. – Ishmaeel Jan 13 '09 at 22:41
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Too easy to game. You get up around 950 and you'll start seeing trivial and/or bad commits just to get the party. A milestone release at least implies you passed QA first.

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Who said it had to be competitive. When any team submits their 1000th commit, everyone has a party? – bradtgmurray Jan 13 '09 at 15:29
I got to 1000 fair and square. Which is more than I can say for my colleagues at 2000 and 3000. Yes John, I'm talking about you. Cheater. – Bramha Ghosh Jan 13 '09 at 15:31
On our team, commits only occur after code is first reviewed, so it's not up to an individual when he commits. This also goes a long way to preventing a broken build in source control. – Scottie T Jan 13 '09 at 15:33
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We make a celebration when completing certain testing stages or development stages for large projects. Usually the choice of stage is based on the bottleneck. When you pass that, we throw a party, and when we deploy to production, another party.

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I considered it something of a milestone when the revision number on a project I worked on last year hit 2008, no party though.

Every commit after that felt like we were heading boldly into the future.

Dumb and geeky I know.

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We generally celebrate (?) the number of bugs. The guy who raised bug 10,000 bought cakes. So did the ones who raised 11k and 12k.

We've not got to 13,000 bugs yet, but we're finding more all the time :)

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Of course! Our section has a number, each time a repository reaches that number a mail is sent with the log + diff of that commit, some statistics (LOCs per coder etc) and a few anecdotes...

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I agree with the comments on gaming the system. You don't really want people committing like crazy just to have a party.

It seems the real problem is you feel your team is not socializing enough. Why not schedule regular socials / mini-parties / poker nights / whatever, and then have your big bash when the release happens.

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