Yeah
Yeah
Yeah
Need to save them within porn jpg.
That way, when mandatory face recognition for age verification comes into play, I will know who you all are! Har har har!
Git is so easy to host yourself and everyone went and handed over all their code to evil corp to farm on anyway.
(Though I do understand that they were bought, but that was a while ago and it was only a matter of time before the evil seeped in.)
It's such a simple reason tbh. Github is expected to stay online indefinitely. My VPS? As long as I pay the bill, which I may not want to at some point.
Codeberg is a decent middle ground - open source projects only. The site itself is open source too.
Their CI/CD minutes are very generous (unlimited!). Plus, if Microsoft wanted to scrape code, it doesn't have to be on Github. They can scrape it off codeberg too. And I can be sure Github won't shut down.
If Github does decide to screw users over, switching to self-hosted forgejo would be trivial.
I think you may be mixing up git, which is a command line tool that's still open source, AFAIK, with github that's a closed source, git-based code hosting platform bought by Microsoft.
You can use other hosting services with git, and get an almost identical experience. Gitlab does it, as well as many others.
You can serve up a git repository remotely very easily on any machine that has a remote access path.
No. You can use got itself. https://jasonmurray.org/posts/2020/selfhostedgit/
I prefer reading my code out loud and saving it as a Audio file
That's ridiculous.
I write mine on paper in cursive so no one can use it anywhere
Yeah, but do you organize the audio files when you make changes?
Reject GitHub. Embrace Codeberg!
I would love a subscription to Codeberg to be able to store private projects though. Codeberg is nice but you need an alternative for those special projects and it's annoying.
Try Codefloe, it has a free tier and you can host both public and private projects.
If you work alone you can just use git local without a remote repo. Otherwise there is always self hosting forgejo (the software behind Codeberg). But I also expect there to be other hosting services for that purpose.
can’t you set codeberg repositories to private?
wrapper_last_version_update.py
You don't need GitHub for Git.
And for those who don't know: git was there first, then github offered it for code management (they are two different things, don't confuse git with github!)
It’s a small thing but I appreciate how you didn’t use the image of the rapper of the original meme who seems like an overall terrible person.
Fuck Drake. Me and all my homies hate Drake
Yeah I don’t get how he was taken so seriously for so long by so many. I get that not every rapper needs to come from a broken and messed up background, but his verses don’t hit that hard due to all the inauthenticity, as if he did grow up on hard streets lol.
gitlab:
Armatures!
Project. New Project.new.new
Project. New Project.new.new
What kind of OOP hell have I fallen into here?
Project.new.new.final.2
Untitled.new.new.optionB.MomsVersion.final.FINALFORREALTHISTIME.jokehaha.okOneMoreEdit.typo.killMePlz (copy 2)
Neither. Version control and remote sync to your self hosted gitlab or gitea, or whatever (or no remote at all if you wanna go gambling with your hard drive).
I wanna go gambling with your hard drive.
I like git(hub) because you can track changes. Not just versions
Just use git. It’s what all these front ends use at their core. It’s all just git which doesn’t need any hosting at all. If all you want is tracking changes you don’t even need to set up a remote to push / pull from. Just install git on your local development machine, make a folder for you project, and run ‘git init’. Now you have a local repo which can track and commit changes and you have all of the incredibly powerful tools available that git provides with ample documentation. Wanna back it up? Just backup the folder with any standard backup application like any other folder.
Gitlab, Gogs, Gitea... you can run all those locally.
But how often do you need that for your personal projects? I just have a git repo on a server that's accessible by ssh. I only use a web frontend when I have to share with other people and then you might as well use a free third party service.
aint that just git
tho? i upload my code on github as a backup and so others can see it?
The bottom picture should be SVN. I miss incremental revision numbers.
The mixed-revisions bug was fun... Also cannot clean history or make shitty branches everywhere, it was one of my worst experience. Nowadays Jujutsu is my favorite.
SVN is still great if there is a need for strict access controls and central control matters a lot. Auditing is also a bit easier with SVN.
It caters more for a linear workflow, though. So modern large teams won't find joy with SVN.
It caters more for a linear workflow, though. So modern large teams won't find joy with SVN
For what it's worth, I work at a FAANG company and we don't use branches at all. Instead, we use feature flags. Source control history is linear with no merges.
All code changes have to go though code review before they can be committed to the main repo. Pull requests are usually not too large (we aim for ~300 lines max), contain a single commit, aren't long-lived (often merged the same day they're submitted unless they're very controversial), can be stacked to handle dependencies between them ("stacked diffs"), and a whole stack can be landed together. When merged, everything is committed directly to the main branch, which all developers are working off of.
I know that both Google and Meta take this approach, and probably other companies too.
git rev-list HEAD | wc -l
Uuuh Mrs/Mr professional programmer and their fancy individual version folders!
Interesting post, but maybe better suited for a dev-focused community? Would love to keep this space more for random stuff.
the occasional software developer post counts as "random stuff", don't you think?
True, but this kind of trend is why Fediverse platforms often stay programmer-heavy. Regular users join, see mostly dev talk even in general spaces, and bounce. I'm not really against posts like this, but I do wish Lemmy could grow its user base by keeping general spaces genuinely random.
Also, just being honest, it kind of sucks that my earlier comment got downvoted. I wasn’t trying to gatekeep, just sharing a harmless opinion about keeping the vibe more random and less tech-centered. Felt like I got shut down for it.
Reddit was like that too. Certain communities gradually became echo chambers just because one group dominated the tone. I'd hate to see Lemmy fall into the same pattern.
And just to follow the same logic—if dev memes count as “random” in lemmyshitpost, I guess I could post “what programming language should I use to build X?” in asklemmy, right? Feels inconsistent to label one as valid and the other as off-topic, depending on who posts it.
used RCS on a VM for years. learning curve not too bad. self hosted for small groups. 3-4 devs
What did GitHub do?
Owned by Microsoft. Microsoft recently blocked e-mail access to a LibreOffice dev. Speculation is that they'll start blocking projects for competing products next.
(Alternative explanation: Gitlab should be part of IT divestment from US-based services.)
Gitlab itself is American these days, legally speaking.
Try Forgejo, self hosted or one of the European hosts (some allow private projects)
No need for that. Have a local server. I don't use git, it's useless for what I'm doing, and Subversion is fine.
Subversion is always fine.
Naw, text layers in a .xcf is where it's at.
It's ok, assuming you are counting down.
This is how you lose your data if something goes wrong. Also, patch notes are extremely good to have.