• starshipwinepineapple
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    1 day ago

    Did you read the article? The author shares their perspective.

    For me, Git is quite powerful on its own with version control, diffs, branches, merging, etc. Forges just add a UI for some of these things, and add an issue tracker/ discussion/etc. Forges also add a more modem ui for repo access though git does have its own webserver you can use. I use git without a forge for a number of my personal projects that I’m not sharing with others or not yet sharing

    • rhabarba@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      Git is quite powerful on its own with version control, diffs, branches, merging, etc.

      All version control systems do that, hence my question.

      Git was conceived as a bazaar (because of its use for the Linux kernel), but most projects are more like cathedrals. In my opinion, Git is simply over-engineered for most projects. For projects that you don’t want to share with others, even CVS would probably suffice…

      • starshipwinepineapple
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        1 day ago

        Well just speaking for myself, i use git without a forge for personal stuff because i was already familiar with git and it fits my needs. No need to learn another version control system for some basic projects i throw together

      • mesa@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        The biggest thing git does is one person can get one or many branches (AKA version control) on ANY machine. They all act like they are the source of truth. CVS/Mercurial/etc…all have the issue that they expect to be on one machine as the source of truth. And if that machine ever goes down…

        Before git (ya im old), I used a plethora of services like git. There were times back then when a server was down and the history…was just gone.

        • rhabarba@feddit.org
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          1 day ago

          Mercurial is decentralised, there is no single “source of truth”. (Not counting “upstream”, of course.)

          • mesa@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Huh interesting, maybe it was the way we used it 15-20+ years ago or maybe it changed. No clue. But yes you are correct.

            • rhabarba@feddit.org
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              1 day ago

              Both Mercurial and Git started around the same time as a replacement for BitKeeper - which also was decentralised.