I often forget to push a few things depending on how Git decides to label my work. Today it labeled a move as a file deletion and add, and only the deletion is present on the upstream, and now the upstream doesn’t even compile properly. And I don’t want to pull out my hair to resolve yet another conflict, because the only help with Git I can get is jUsT reAD ThE WhoLE maNUaL.

One other thing is that I refuse to use VSCode, especially since they’re pushing AI slop code generation so much, and I use KATE instead.

  • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.worldOP
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    27 days ago

    Then I add those to .gitignore, so I won’t forget the files I need to commit, so I don’t have to dive through AI slop articles about git to resolve merge conflicts (often things that should have been automatically resolved, except someone didn’t have basic common sense).

    • CameronDev@programming.dev
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      27 days ago

      .gitignore is good for stuff that will always be there, but is less good for small one-off files and other detritus.

      But if your happy maintaining .gitignore correctly, git add . before commit and youll never miss a file again. You may accidentally commit a secrets file, but thats a different problem for a different day.