HN always said that Git and its naming is so complex that from startups to matured faang daddies, nobody invests a workshop or two per week in it. I am at loss of words to see that companies rather find young talent use emacs/vim which are an old hag of a complex editors.
Thank you for making this. I hope you find a good chunk of enthusiastic bigshots contributing this.
Thanks mate. I've heard a couple of times from people learning to code - "JavaScript is fine, it's everything else that makes the process overwhelming". 'Everything else' referring to Git, webpack, etc... My goal is to get people comfortable with Git in an isolated environment, away from coding. Leverage knowledge they already have (a timeline / history of the world) to help understanding.
I think if you try to learn Git + programming language + webpack + ... all at once, your trying to go from crawling to sprinting. Better to learn each of these in isolation so you go from crawling, to walking, to jogging, to sprinting.
What a great setup. I really love the premise, but I feel that it needs slightly more instructions. As I'm struggling in finding out what exactly to do.
For example:
- It was a not so obvious to find out I had to click on the green flashing text.
- "Find the git pull command", I keep typing "git pull" but there is no help whatsoever (apart from the beep). Does "Find" mean that I need to find it in the documentation? Do I need to type it? Nothing is added to the commands list on the bottom left.
Sorry about that. I'll change the copy to make it clearer. The pull command will be in 1 of the newspaper's science & technology column. It will have the green flashing background behind it.
absolutely brilliant idea! Also love the implementation.
As far as it concerns me, as a TA in a CS university, this is truly an inspiration to make technical matters way more fun and appealing. Please continue to work on such matters!
15 comments
[ 5.6 ms ] story [ 48.0 ms ] threadThank you for making this. I hope you find a good chunk of enthusiastic bigshots contributing this.
I think if you try to learn Git + programming language + webpack + ... all at once, your trying to go from crawling to sprinting. Better to learn each of these in isolation so you go from crawling, to walking, to jogging, to sprinting.
For example:
- It was a not so obvious to find out I had to click on the green flashing text.
- "Find the git pull command", I keep typing "git pull" but there is no help whatsoever (apart from the beep). Does "Find" mean that I need to find it in the documentation? Do I need to type it? Nothing is added to the commands list on the bottom left.
(refreshed, cleared cookies, using FF and Chrome on Mac)
Also, thanks for the reply. Appreciated :-)