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1 point by mulander 6127 days ago | link | parent | on: Arconauts near DC...

I'm using XMonad for about a week right now.

I must say that I'm very pleasantly surprised by the quality and usability of this software.

If You didn't do it already, consider trying it out. It's worth the time.

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6 points by mulander 6130 days ago | link | parent | on: Poll: Where are you from ?

Please add Poland ;)

>>(very Arcish btw : it's not added until it's necessary).

I would say more like a Haskell approach ;)

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4 points by almkglor 6130 days ago | link

Lazy, lazy!

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1 point by mulander 6141 days ago | link | parent | on: Tracking patches

Have you considered using darcs? http://darcs.net This SCM is patch oriented, and should allow You to do exactly what You described without any trouble. I recently gave it a try and it perfectly matched my workflow.

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1 point by nex3 6141 days ago | link

Despite its patch-oriented nature, Darcs doesn't really offer anything (that I could see) that Git doesn't. This is part of the reason I didn't choose it for Anarki in the first place, although it really is a fun system. The patches would still be a series of separate, interdependent patches. And I don't think Darcs even has a parallel to git rebase to squash them all together.

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1 point by mulander 6141 days ago | link

I totally agree that Darcs is fun :) I mentioned it here because the initial post described a workflow that fits into Darcs perfectly, not in an attempt to compare Darcs to Git.

From the Darcs official manual (the tag command):

While traditional revision control systems tag versions in the time line history, darcs lets you tag any configuration of patches at any time, and pass the tags around between branches.

Also please take time to read:

http://wiki.darcs.net/DarcsWiki/SpontaneousBranches

http://wiki.darcs.net/DarcsWiki/PreparationBranches

PS. Sorry for any grammar/lexical mistakes in my writing, as english is not my native language.

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1 point by nex3 6141 days ago | link

I was looking into this stuff a while ago - Darcs was actually my first distributed version-control system. When I started playing around with Git, I was initially a little dismayed that it didn't seem to have the history-changing abilities darcs has (apparently called "preparation branches" - I never knew that).

I asked around a little, though, and it turns out that "git rebase -i" essentially encompasses all those capabilities. The UI isn't as nice as darcs' until you get used to it - darcs has very well-designed, intuitive UI - but all the functionality is there.

I had heard about, but forgotten, spontaneous branches. They do seem to be very much like what Cat Dancer was asking for.

Your English is excellent :-).

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