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Sure. Let's drive a Panzer VI instead of a car. More power, more responsibility. Heil Git.
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But can it get from Berlin to Warsaw on one tank of fuel?
You'll never get very far if all you do is follow instructions.
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Allow me to bring my modest contribution.
(CEF build excerpt)
$ git svn find-rev r251746
_
Oh, I forgot to say: this was started 2 hours ago. Thanks, I have my Ctrl/C.
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Most useful post I've read today. I was under the impression that GIT cured all source control ills, and I was some sort of luddite for not knowing anything about it.
Now I know everyone despises it I will let it bother me no more.
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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Chalk up one for not despising it here.
I've been using it for the past few months and there's definitely a fairly steep learning curve if you've never used a DVCS before.
It certainly has some quirks and annoyances, but as I get used to things I see the benefits. I think the key is finding a workflow that works for what you're doing.
I generally use SourceTree as a GUI, which is pretty good, and fall back to the command line when doing some things that aren't supported (interactive rebase being the primary one)
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Personally I have little issue with Git.
But I just knew that someone would come along and tell everybody the difficulty was their own fault.
How nauseatingly immature that is, and how self-destructive. Trying to defend, blindly, a piece of software against a chorus of criticism, developer criticism at that, shows total disregard for the end user and I for one would never show any interest in adopting products created by people like that.
Did I already mention I have no problem with Git?
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We are moving to Git where I work and this thread is not giving me any warm fuzzies.
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The only time I used Git I had to type like 10 commands to be sure that I got the right branch, this coupled with the lack of a fully functioning GUI made me switch to TFS.
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GIT is a great tool… in the same way that an advanced CNC milling machine is a great tool. If you’re working in a very specialized environment, with highly skilled craftspeople that are well-trained and understand how to properly use – and what the dangers are – of such a tool, then it is the appropriate tool for that environment.
That environment is most likely producing specialized items; prototypes, one-off’s, uniquely difficult items to fabricate, or have other special needs (the machine shop at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory comes to mind).
I’ll admit, a CNC milling machine is pretty cool… I’ve used (and accidently abused) them. But when my task was to quickly drill a hole, I didn’t want to waste time trying to set up that complex machine when a simple drill press – or even hand drill – would do the job more quickly and safely.
In fact, if you need to quickly and safely attach part A to part B, you don’t want a CNC milling machine, you want a power screwdriver; maybe one with torque settings, speed control, and a few other simple, self-obvious features. It’s going to let you focus on your job of attaching the parts together and moving on to the next task. Something like Subversion or the myriad of other source control systems that aren’t so cool but do their job of managing source, and allow me, as a developer, to intuitively check out, update, merge, diff, and check in source code.
So if you’re developing something specialized, like the Linux kernel, or have a relatively small team of highly distributed people whom you can afford to train (and pay accordingly), then by all means you should consider GIT. That is the environment and skill level the tool was developed for. But if your focus on writing software, with teams of developers at a various skill levels, and you want them to focus their time and effort on developing the software business solutions that make your company money, then GIT is most likely not the appropriate solution, no matter how “cool” folks say it is.
BTW, we are a small, start-up, who hastily chose GIT because “everyone is going to it”. After a year, no one in the organization is comfortable with it, most of the developers don’t trust it because we have all managed to destroy work by doing “what seemed intuitive”, and it's a decision we all regret.
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This is great !
~RaGE();
I think words like 'destiny' are a way of trying to find order where none exists. - Christian Graus
Entropy isn't what it used to.
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Article[^]
Gee, I can think of a few more.
Marc
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Too much time. Way too much time is what some people have.
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and way too much funding.
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It's sad that they think this is science...
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is. (V)
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They forgot the most important:
I don't care, its not my problem. You fix it.
Microsoft ... the only place where VARIANT_TRUE != true
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Programmers identify fake scientists.
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Yesterday I ate Basturma[^] for the fist time is this what you call BACON? Basturma is a cow meat and it is halal.
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Mohamad M. Mohamad wrote: this what you call BACON? No!
Bacon[^]
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is. (V)
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So it is only pig meat 
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Bacon is - so it's not for you...But that basturma looks great, so no need to cry...
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is. (V)
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Yes it was yummy but it is expensive about 1 Kg ~ 26 USD
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I can confirm: Basturma is nowhere near as good as bacon.
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How do you know that? Where did you taste it?
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