Hi, On Mon, 22 Oct 2007, Andreas Ericsson wrote: > Johannes Schindelin wrote: > > > I'd really like people to respond not so much with broad and general > > statements to my mail (those statements tend to be rather useless to > > find how to make git more suitable to newbies), but rather with > > concrete top ten lists of what they do daily. > > > > My top ten list: > > > > - git diff > > - git commit > > - git status > > - git fetch > > - git rebase > > - git pull > > - git cherry-pick > > - git bisect > > - git push > > - git add > > > > So again, I'd like people who did _not_ tweak git to their likings to > > tell the most common steps they do. My hope is that we see things > > that are good practices, but could use an easier user interface. > > I'm not so sure we'd want to hide commands that git-gurus simply do not > use, such as git-blame. I was not talking about commands that git gurus simply do not use. I explicitely avoided asking "git gurus" for what they use. > In my opinion, we should just locate the highest level available of UI > tool that implements a particular feature and have that listed in the > git[- ]<tab> view. >From the survey it is utterly clear that the available UI tools are still not good enough. So once again, what operations involving git do people use regularly? <rationale>There is a good chance that git is not optimised for most people's daily workflows, as project maintainers seemed to be much more forthcoming with patches, and therefore maintainers' tasks are much more optimised than in other SCMs.</rationale> Ciao, Dscho P.S.: If nobody replies with actual daily workflows to this mail, I'll just assume that this complaint in the user survey was just bullocks, and no change in git is needed. - 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