undo [or equivalent] in buffer. no saving to disk. emacs auto save to an auto-expiring directory
emacs backups every save to an auto-expiring directory git snapshots when i feel like it. search as needed. branching in the text itself, by use of comments above if it is incoming/new and below if it is old/reference. many use git branch but i wouldn't remember the branch was in git and i don't want to have to rely on git for such things unless it disrupts the text without it. for me it is merely an archive. it is not an active repository of future possibilities and current ongoing activities. even with magit, git ui is complex to me. its storage model is not merely an endofuctor of dags. so i use only basic features when possible. many years later i still fear merges/rebases and even stashes and find the merge/rebase presentation to be quite bizarre and can't believe anybody finds it the most useful. certain sequences of staging, unstaging, and snaphotting can actually cause buffer corruption. git notes feature is another complexity which while small i'd rather have git recognize all file permissions by default. incidentally, rsync wrapper called rsnapshot works well. i wouldn't use it for branching. you can use unix commands = win. On 6/9/21, Dr. Arne Babenhauserheide <arne_...@web.de> wrote: > > Eric S Fraga <e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk> writes: > >>> Not sure if it counts as off-topic for this thread, but does everyone >>> use Git to manage their Org docs and notes? >> >> I use a variety of version control systems but for multiple computers I >> use unison to keep them all synchronised. > > I use Mercurial for all my private versiontracking. > > Best wishes, > Arne > -- > Unpolitisch sein > heißt politisch sein > ohne es zu merken > -- The Kafka Pandemic Please learn what misopathy is. https://thekafkapandemic.blogspot.com/2013/10/why-some-diseases-are-wronged.html