Would never turn that on myself! I use an app or two that would break upon update - no fault of the devs, but glad to be in the minority who can keep on keeping on (for now).
I used to be, but once I started doing a commit each feature I got in the habit - it’s great when you fuck something up and need to see how you did it before
On solo personal projects I’m much worse, because I’m not afraid to rip it apart and put it back together on a whim…I usually go in with a goal, but then I might decide “this design isn’t going to work much longer, let’s rewrite this”, and 8 hours later I’ve made a bunch of improvements. Maybe even the one I set out to do
When that happens, I do like Minecraft - I give it a name.
And since the people I work with never read commit messages, after I list the changes I remember off the top of my head I sometimes do some creative writing. Sometimes I put my next plans to lay them out, sometimes I write about philosophy, sometimes I go on a rant about specific criticisms of the language or vent about how this was so much harder than it should have been. Occasionally I write a haiku
It’s so much easier to keep up with it when you just have fun with it…I just treat it like a reflection exercise
“Bugfixes and performance improvements”
I ‘member when iOS apps used to say more than that in the changelogs.
Shoutout to Voyager for bucking the trend!
Almost every iPhone out there at this point has automatic app updates turned on so no one ever reads the changelog
Great point.
Would never turn that on myself! I use an app or two that would break upon update - no fault of the devs, but glad to be in the minority who can keep on keeping on (for now).
I’m guilty of this on my personal projects :x
My Git history is a mess because I use Githubs online editor, as I still struggle with git and ssh setup. Tbh should be done now, but too lazy.
Get on my level XD
I used to be, but once I started doing a commit each feature I got in the habit - it’s great when you fuck something up and need to see how you did it before
On solo personal projects I’m much worse, because I’m not afraid to rip it apart and put it back together on a whim…I usually go in with a goal, but then I might decide “this design isn’t going to work much longer, let’s rewrite this”, and 8 hours later I’ve made a bunch of improvements. Maybe even the one I set out to do
When that happens, I do like Minecraft - I give it a name.
And since the people I work with never read commit messages, after I list the changes I remember off the top of my head I sometimes do some creative writing. Sometimes I put my next plans to lay them out, sometimes I write about philosophy, sometimes I go on a rant about specific criticisms of the language or vent about how this was so much harder than it should have been. Occasionally I write a haiku
It’s so much easier to keep up with it when you just have fun with it…I just treat it like a reflection exercise