Donald Stufft <don...@stufft.io> writes:

> I have never heard of git losing history.

In my experience talking with Git users about this problem, that depends
on a very narrow definition of “losing history”.

Git encourages re-writing, and thereby losing prior versions of, the
history of a branch. The commit information remains, but the history of
how they link together is lost. That is a loss of information, which is
not the case in the absence of such history re-writing.

Git users differ in whether they consider that information loss
important; but it is, objectively, losing history information. So
Ethan's impression is correct on this point.

-- 
 \       “If you see an animal and you can't tell if it's a skunk or a |
  `\   cat, here's a good saying to help: ‘Black and white, stinks all |
_o__)              right. Tabby-colored, likes a fella.’” —Jack Handey |
Ben Finney

_______________________________________________
Python-Dev mailing list
Python-Dev@python.org
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev
Unsubscribe: 
https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to