• @[email protected]
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    -21 year ago

    Another reason I just manually backup my project and avoid Git despite all my other developer friends shaming me. One command and I am out of there.

    • @meliaesc
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      51 year ago

      That doesn’t hold up so well when you work with other people on a project.

        • @meliaesc
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          11 year ago

          Merging conflicts will be an issue no matter what you’re working on. Maintaining different sets of code bases based on the version/release will be an issue even when working alone.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Can you describe a situation that underscores this issue as I am not seeing it, but maybe I experience it and do not even realize.

            • @meliaesc
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              1 year ago

              Situation: You’re building some software to display emojis based on user input.

              Current code: when user types “happy”, output 🙂

              • Your new requirement: when user types “happy”, output 😃 instead of 🙂
              • Coworker’s new requirement: when user types “sad”, output 😭

              You implement your change, back it up, and the new version with 😀 is released. But it turns out 😃 is the ultimate insult in the Snowflake region, and you need to immediately rollback 😃 back to 🙂 while you find an alternative.

              Meanwhile, Coworker has added 😭 to your backup, which still has 😃. Now when you try to rollback to 🙂, Coworker’s code gets erased. Now your code is unable to safely support both 😭 with 🙂 without starting over entirely. Maybe you want to disable 😀 only for the Snowflake region, but that’s not possible either without harding coding the regions instead of just changing the deployment.

              Now imagine working with a team of 10 people, or a company with 100 people working on this same software. With features and release dates constantly changing.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                I would agree with more people these tools become more needed, but I am talking about a solo dev situation who is the only person who accesses the code base. All other contributors I carefully import.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      That doesnt sound like a good reason. What other reasons could you possibly have to do copypasta backups over what you can at least use as a diff based backup letting you still access any old version you want

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        I just find frequent full backups give me more control and less surprises when I find out my code did not sync/commit or some other issue. Done it for 3 years and it has been very worthwhile. Saved my project from a loss so many times now.