This is truly glorious #AISlop from #Microslop in their "Introduction to Github" course.
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@dazfuller this is embarrassing, I will bitch internally
@mapache just please don’t throw Tinm under the bus, it’ll disrupt the space time continuum
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@jackeric @dazfuller so they also stole this essentially then?
@thibaultmol @jackeric stole "and improved with AI"
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This is truly glorious #AISlop from #Microslop in their "Introduction to Github" course.
I don't know why Tim is working in the opposite direction, but I can see that he never once "morges" his code back into develop, let alone doing it "continvoucly"
Update:
It looks as though after 4-5 months the page has been updated, but if you want to see the image in situ still then the way back machine has you covered.
@dazfuller Tim with and extra ∩

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@dallo
It was a nice diagram, but poor workflow even in 2010. The gitworkflows(7) man page was first written in 2008 and had clear rationale. I made this figure in that era to show the parallelism exposed by the workflow. As CI has become more robust, many projects moved away from having a 'next' as a throw-away integration branch, but it is a useful strategy especially if you want user feedback on experimental features before you commit to including them by merging to 'main' (formerly 'master').
https://git-scm.com/docs/gitworkflows
@dazfuller -
@dazfuller the course page has been updated; I don't see this image in there.
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@dazfuller and stolen from sources like https://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/
@thezeronine@mastodon.pnpde.social @dazfuller@mstdn.social wow that is way more clearly stolen then I thought, damn
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@itgrrl @dazfuller this almost made me choke on my covfefe thanks

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This is truly glorious #AISlop from #Microslop in their "Introduction to Github" course.
I don't know why Tim is working in the opposite direction, but I can see that he never once "morges" his code back into develop, let alone doing it "continvoucly"
Update:
It looks as though after 4-5 months the page has been updated, but if you want to see the image in situ still then the way back machine has you covered.
@dazfuller -squints- I think his name might be Tirm
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This is truly glorious #AISlop from #Microslop in their "Introduction to Github" course.
I don't know why Tim is working in the opposite direction, but I can see that he never once "morges" his code back into develop, let alone doing it "continvoucly"
Update:
It looks as though after 4-5 months the page has been updated, but if you want to see the image in situ still then the way back machine has you covered.
@dazfuller But you know what they mean if you already know what they teach on that page! So why be so picky?
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@dazfuller
And this is the figure from the 2010 blog post that their machine plagiarized (badly).
https://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/@jedbrown@hachyderm.io @dazfuller@mstdn.social Thank you... I knew it was incredibly familiar, but the familiar version, felt like it was not too bad (hey it may not be perfect, but it's certainly not confusing like, "hey what why huh..."). Much appreciated.
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@moira Maybe Tinm is real, they’re going back to save us
Maybe they're thinking themselves onto existence.
https://www.peopleofar.com/2013/07/02/worlds-shortest-poem/ -
@dazfuller The morging and continvoucliousity is the "major featue for next release" ofc. Not sure when that will happen since the chart doesn't seem to know whether it's coming or going....
@be0ba @dazfuller It will happen early in last month. Aren't you going to have paid attention?
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@thibaultmol @jackeric stole "and improved with AI"
@thibaultmol @dazfuller That diagram, that branching model, fascinated me back then - I only learned of git c.2010 and have always loved using it.
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@itgrrl @dazfuller Tim says it best.
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This is truly glorious #AISlop from #Microslop in their "Introduction to Github" course.
I don't know why Tim is working in the opposite direction, but I can see that he never once "morges" his code back into develop, let alone doing it "continvoucly"
Update:
It looks as though after 4-5 months the page has been updated, but if you want to see the image in situ still then the way back machine has you covered.
@dazfuller I used to be an author of Learn modules. It was a few years ago, but I think they were moving heavily into AI produced documentation. I think this proves it. So sad.
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This is truly glorious #AISlop from #Microslop in their "Introduction to Github" course.
I don't know why Tim is working in the opposite direction, but I can see that he never once "morges" his code back into develop, let alone doing it "continvoucly"
Update:
It looks as though after 4-5 months the page has been updated, but if you want to see the image in situ still then the way back machine has you covered.
@dazfuller check out my new git flow diagram!
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@dazfuller I used to be an author of Learn modules. It was a few years ago, but I think they were moving heavily into AI produced documentation. I think this proves it. So sad.
@phils it really is, I used to point to these documents as a gold standard
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@dazfuller check out my new git flow diagram!
@ipsavitsky this is way more understandable and clearly identifies the same pain points
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@phils it really is, I used to point to these documents as a gold standard
@dazfuller I was very proud to have worked on them

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This is truly glorious #AISlop from #Microslop in their "Introduction to Github" course.
I don't know why Tim is working in the opposite direction, but I can see that he never once "morges" his code back into develop, let alone doing it "continvoucly"
Update:
It looks as though after 4-5 months the page has been updated, but if you want to see the image in situ still then the way back machine has you covered.
@dazfuller the Microsoft project manager was tagged on the post on bluesky and he took it down in like an hour
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