Hi Brandon,

you have very nicely summed up the features that a modern spreadsheet should 
offer.

I touched myself some of these features in a similar post on the OpenOffice.org 
website, see:

http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=80139
(especially the Track Changes paragraph) and
http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=80325

Indeed, tracking only some of the cells is a fundamental feature for tracking 
changes in spreadsheets.

Also, it is needed to track changes in the computed values, NOT the cell 
content per se.

Your additional suggestions offer really new insights into multiple ways of 
improving existing spreadsheet aplications.

Sincerely,

Leonard


PS: Original message attached to this e-mail is
intended for the OOo mailing list


-------- Original-Nachricht --------
> Datum: Fri, 01 Feb 2008 15:09:54 -0600
> Von: Brandon Casey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> An: [email protected]
> Betreff: scm-like change tracking in gnumeric

> 
> Hi,
> 
> Has anyone considered the idea of adding full SCM-like revision tracking
> to gnumeric?
> 
> I have found traditional change tracking to be lacking when working with
> spreadsheets.
> 
> I have recently begun using git to manage my source code and I am very
> impressed with its flexibility.
> 
> Why shouldn't spreadsheet revision tracking have these capabilities:
> 
>     -snapshot the current state of the spreadsheet and record a message
>      describing what was done and why. (i.e. commit)
>     -select a limited set of cells to track
>     -checkout an older state of the spreadsheet.
>     -checkout a selected range of cells from an older spreadsheet state.
>     -revert the changes made in a previous commit.
>     -'diff' two spreadsheet states
>     -No limitations on the allowed operations while tracking.
>      e.g. Other spreadsheets disallow deleting, moving, splitting, and
>           copying cells while tracking, and mergin, and deleting sheets.
>           These operations should not be restricted.
>     -"real" merging.
>         -If I modify some cells and another user modifies different
>          cells, and then I attempt to merge, it should produce a clean
>          merge with both sets of changes.
>         -If I move a cell, and another user modifies the function in that
>          cell, the merged spreadsheet should contain the modified
>          function in the moved location.
>         -If I change the name of a sheet, and then merge with another
>          user, the new spreadsheet should merge cleanly with the updated
>          sheet name.
> 
>         -Conflicts should be marked for a human to resolve. In some
> "document"
>          merging procedures a priority is given to one version or the
> other,
>          so that changes from the higher priority version take precedence
> over
>          the other version in the case of a conflict. A human is not given
> the
>          opportunity to adjust the merge in progress.
> 
> These are all things that modern scm's provide.
> 
> Traditional spreadsheet tracking allows you to keep track of each
> individual
> change to each cell. But many times, especially when you're dealing with a
> complex spreadsheet, it is the net change to many cells which produces a
> single
> logical change worthy of recording.
> 
> For example, updating or introducing a new algorithm may require modifying
> many
> cells in order to implement. The intermediate states are not very
> interesting,
> but I _would_ like to make a commit for the final result and record a
> message
> describing the new algorithm and why it was necessary or how it improves
> over
> the previous algorithm.
> 
> Possibly later, I may decide that the old algorithm worked better than the
> new
> one. I should be able to revert the commit in whole.
> 
> Does anyone else find this idea as interesting as I do? Any thoughts on
> the
> feasibility?
> 
> I haven't done more than salivate at the thought of being able to track
> changes in my spreadsheet as easily as I can track changes in my source
> code.
> 
> -brandon
> 
> _______________________________________________
> gnumeric-list mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumeric-list

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