lolcatnip,

I swear to God sometimes git just conjures merge conflicts out of nothing.

kaffiene,

This week? I’ve been using it for years and I’m still learning it

m3t00,
@m3t00@lemmy.world avatar

coffee

Imbrex,

so do ya’ll like git or git in a hub?

ohlaph,

It do be like that sometimes.

ensignrick,
@ensignrick@startrek.website avatar

So many orphaned branches… Poor things.

noddy,

I prefer rebasing on destination branch before merging. When merging you get all the conflicts at the same time. When rebasing you can address conflicts from one commit at a time. Untangling multiple small knots is easier than one huge spaghetti. Also commit history will be much cleaner.

Shhalahr,

Go, Team Rebase!

AMillionNames,
yoz,

Lol what’s git?

twei,

git gud. HA, GOTTEM

UNWILLING_PARTICIPANT,

Yes you did

NaoPb,

It’s what americans from a rural area say when they want you to go away.

EpicFailGuy,
@EpicFailGuy@lemmy.world avatar

is what people who don’t know vim and rsync have to use to mimic 1% of our power

kaffiene,

I just did myself an eye injury due to rolling them so much

alcoholicorn,

It’s the thing you use to create a local copy of the main code base, and then merge your changes back in.

OP hasn’t done anything, and there’s 7 conflicts between his code and main. Presumably because someone else merged their changes in the time between when OP pulled his local copy and tried to push his (non-existent) changes.

UNWILLING_PARTICIPANT,

A very complicated way to do


<span style="color:#323232;">My project
</span><span style="color:#323232;">My project (1)
</span><span style="color:#323232;">My project WORKING
</span><span style="color:#323232;">My project (2)
</span><span style="color:#323232;">My project (2) (1)
</span>
yoz,

Lol

stilgar,
@stilgar@infosec.pub avatar

Pro tip: If your code gets flogged by git, you can always get revenge with git reflog 😉

cupcakezealot,
@cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

lemme rebase the main branch onto my branch.

two minutes later

1 merge conflict of 57 [abort] [continue]

affiliate,

this is easily fixed by copy pasting the files into a new directory and never opening git again out of fear

caseyweederman,

Project managers hate this one weird trick!

kamen,

One key thing that can help you wrap your head around rebasing is that branches get switched while you’re doing it; so, say you’re on branch feature and do git rebase master, for any merge conflict, whatever’s marked “current” will be on master and what’s “incoming” is from feature.

There’s also git rerere that should in theory remember a resolution you do between two branches and reuse it every time after the first; I’ve rarely used it in practice; it would happen for long lived branches that don’t get merged.

roastpotatothief,

Git is a great invention but it has a few design flaws. There are too many ways to confuse it or break it, using commands that look correct, or just forgetting something. I ended up writing simple wrapper script codebase to fix it. Since then no problems.

oce,
@oce@jlai.lu avatar

It was conceived for experts so the new user experience is shit and the UI is not intuitive. But it has become such a widespread standard that it is very hard to completely overhaul the UI.

roastpotatothief,

Yes you couldn’t change something so widely used. Look what happened with python 3.

Fortunately there’s already a tradition among Git users of building a UI on top of the git UI. My project is just a slightly better version of those. It lays a simple sensible interface on top of the chaotic Git interface.

sheogorath,

TBH compared to the old versioning system people used to use like SVN and Mercurial. Git is a godsend. Just taking your time in learning and not using a GUI client works wonders in learning how it works. Especially when all the GUI clients are basically a collection of commands being executed so if you fuck things up on CLI you know what happened vs using GUI.

lolcatnip,

I’m pretty sure Mercurial is newer than git, or at least from the same generation.

Pxtl,
@Pxtl@lemmy.ca avatar

Even for experts the user experience is shit. Too much has to be done manually when the default should be automatic, like fetching before pull, recursing when working with repos that use submodules, allowing mismatched casing on case insensitive filesystems, etc.

oce,
@oce@jlai.lu avatar

Submodule commands are such mess, which is sad because it is a great feature.

Shhalahr,

Yeah. It’s got no abstraction between the UI and the implementation. You just want to manage code versions, but to use Git, you need to learn how to manage history graphs.

Andrew15_5,
PeWu,

Oh, you haven’t seen my lack of skill then.

Andrew15_5,

Show me.

lseif,

if u ever get a tricky merge conflict, just git push --force. this automatically works out the right code to keep (your own)

erogenouswarzone,
@erogenouswarzone@lemmy.ml avatar

Also, a way to never have to work again!

Nahdahar,

Except if you’re an employer in a very small company.

Source: my boss did this at the first company I worked at.

Netrunner,
@Netrunner@programming.dev avatar

If you can’t use git I don’t see how you’re gonna do with other things. It’s dead simple.

jack,

Solving merge conflicts or rebasing is not simple

lightnegative,

Do it enough times and it stops being scary.

Using a tool like VSCode to perform the actual merges on individual files also helps because it shows what “yours” and “theirs” changes are from a user perspective, not a git perspective

boomzilla,

The 3-way merge editor in VSCode is a fantastic tool. Really helps in visualizing what comes from where and preventing merge accidents.

buzziebee,

It’s doable once you know what you’re doing. I can do it all via the cli, but I personally use gitkraken most of the time and it’s just so much easier and more ergonomic.

I also see a lot of the Devs who insist they know what they’re doing create horrible messes of their branches super easily via the commit tree. People should just use whatever works best for them to get the job done.

space_comrade,

It’s not THAT complicated but I wouldn’t call it dead simple. When you understand how git works internally yeah it’s pretty simple but people usually start with the idea that it’s a tool to put your code on a server to synchronize with other people and only later learn that you have both a local and a remote (or multiple remote) tree and how the tree really works.

I think the problem is most git 101 tutorials teach it wrong, IMO the best git tutorial is this: wildlyinaccurate.com/a-hackers-guide-to-git/

Unfortunately it’s pretty dense so it’s gonna scare off a lot of newbies.

oce, (edited )
@oce@jlai.lu avatar

If it was dead simple you wouldn’t need to learn 10 new concepts and google commands regularly even after using it for a couple of years. You probably forgot how you struggled at first. I have taught it multiple times and I see how beginners struggle.

sajran,

I would actually say it’s VERY complicated but in daily work you probably need like 5 commands and those aren’t hard at all.

Shinji_Ikari,
@Shinji_Ikari@hexbear.net avatar

Its not dead simple but its also not extremely complex.

I’m currently working with some interns and there’s just concepts they were never exposed to. Without decent mentoring, git can be difficult because a lot of the workflow does come with experience.

That being said everyone needs to stop acting like its an impossible task to properly do source control. There is some truth that if you don’t care enough to do your source control, you don’t care enough to write decent code. Its not a moral failing, just take some pride in your craft.

Show the newbies how to care and they’ll care enough to want to do it right. Measure twice, cut once and all that.

fox,

It’s definitely not simple to use but I agree that the conceptual model it represents is straightforward. I think a lot of the problems people have with git come from not understanding the underlying data structure before learning how to manipulate it.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • uselessserver093
  • Food
  • aaaaaaacccccccce
  • [email protected]
  • test
  • CafeMeta
  • testmag
  • MUD
  • RhythmGameZone
  • RSS
  • dabs
  • Socialism
  • KbinCafe
  • TheResearchGuardian
  • oklahoma
  • feritale
  • SuperSentai
  • KamenRider
  • All magazines