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Home/ Questions/Q 6172093
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T23:20:01+00:00 2026-05-23T23:20:01+00:00

I just came across the following commit on GitHub: https://github.com/felixge/node-formidable/commit/0a0b150668daa3c6f01626d2565b898e5da12392 How does one go

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I just came across the following commit on GitHub:
https://github.com/felixge/node-formidable/commit/0a0b150668daa3c6f01626d2565b898e5da12392

How does one go about having multiple authors on the same commit like that?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T23:20:02+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 11:20 pm

    That’s not really two authors – that’s an author and a committer. The two fields have different meanings. The author is the one who created the content, and the committer is the one who committed it. When you do a normal commit, you are both. (And both come with an associated email and timestamp.)

    But they can become different in a few key ways:

    • git format-patch / git am – this pair lets you turn commits into patches, generally submitted by email, then have someone else apply them. You remain the author; the person who applies them is the committer. This is pretty definitely what happened on github there.

    • git commit --amend, git rebase, git filter-branch – These are all basically variants on history rewriting, ranging from single commit to some history of a branch to the entire history. They can potentially modify the committer information – in particular, they always rewrite the committer timestamp. The original author remains in place (in default modes of operation), and if the author is also the one doing the rewriting, their name and email stay, but the timestamp is naturally different.

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