On Sun, Aug 25, 2019 at 7:54 PM Johannes Sixt <j6t@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Am 23.08.19 um 22:43 schrieb Albert Vaca Cintora: > > However, I'm sure that a large percentage of developers out there will > > agree with me that having to use force (-f) to delete every cloned > > repo is annoying, and even worse, it creates the bad habit of always > > force-deleting everything. > > IMO, the bad habit is to delete cloned repositories all the time. If > your workflow necessitates this, then you are doing something wrong. > Maybe you have an X-Y-problem? > > -- Hannes There are plenty of valid workflows where one would delete a repo. What you suggest is like saying I shouldn't delete pictures from my camera, because in that case I shouldn't have taken them in the first place. Sometimes I clone a repo just to grep for an error string and then I don't need it anymore, or I clone several repos until I find the one that contains what I want and delete the rest. Sometimes I want to write a patch for some software I don't develop regularly so I don't need to keep a clone of it. In any case, it would be useful to know the reason those files are read-only in the first place. Do you guys know who might know? Albert