Hi git people, in a recent conversation at work, the question of how to programmatically edit the git-rebase sequence came up. Example use case: I have a branch that touches a number of files, adds some files and removes some files. When rebasing, I want to split all commits that touched a certain subset of files, for the clearity of the history. I look at the output of git log master..mybranch --oneline --diff-filter=M -- "./subdir/*.rs" to find all commits in that subdir that only touched the files. All of these commits are to be "edit"ed. Now I fire up `git rebase -i master` and manually(!) match the list from above `git-log` call and find the respective commits to edit them. Is there a way I am not aware of to do that manual step programatically? Something like git rebase -i master --edit-commits="$(git log master..mybranch --diff-filter=M --format="%H" -- "./subdir/*.rs")" would be convenient here, although I would understand if that is too much clutter for the already very heavy git CLI interface :-) Maybe I am just not aware of the obvious solution - I would be happy to learn that there is already one! Best, Matthias