Angelo Borsotti <angelo.borsotti <at> gmail.com> writes:
> take a git commit without --allow-empty: if the trees are equal, it
> creates no commit,
> and if the trees are different it creates one.
> Take then a git commit --allow-empty: if the trees are equal it may
> create a commit or
> not depending on the parent, message, author and date; if the trees
> are different it
> creates a commit.
> So, the statement does not apply to commits in general.

It does (as already shown to you). The ID of a commit object depends on
the author, the time, the tree, and the commit message (did I forget
something?). If all these are equal, no new physical object will be
created.

Independent of this: If you are on a branch "foo" pointing to a commit A
and successfully do a commit (with --allow-empty or not), "foo" will
afterwards point to a commit B different from A. So, a successful
"git commit (--allow-empty)" will always add a commit to the branch
you are on.

  -- Lars.

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