On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 10:50:55PM +0200, Matthieu Moy wrote: > For those of you who weren't at the Git Merge conference last week, we > goot a tee-shirt with this drawing: > [...] Oops, you made me realize that I forgot to grab a t-shirt. :) I'm going to see if we had leftovers (which I guess we should, since there should have been one per attendee). If you attended but did not get one, let me know and I'll see if it's possible to get one shipped. > Initially, I thought the circles represented Git contributors, and links > represented people contributing to the same parts of the codebase. But > looking at the output of "shortlog -s", I can't find a correspondance > with the tee-shirt. My second guess is that they represent directories. > But even then, I can't find which of the tee-shirt's circles represents > which directory, and the count doesn't match. > > Does anybody have a better explanation? Or is it just a random drawing > to say "Git is bigger than it used to be"? I believe it is "gource"[1] output from 2005 and 2015, tweaked by a graphic designer to make it look nicer. I do like the design, but it's probably not the most meaningful representation of git's growth. It is showing that the tree has grown, but I think it is much more interesting how the number of contributors has grown (or the number of users!). Unfortunately, exponential graphs are not as interesting to look at. :) -Peff [1] https://github.com/acaudwell/Gource -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html