| > I think this is a very lopsided way of looking at pull requests. They are about a lot more than just trust. Reviewing and being reviewed is a great way of learning from colleagues, making common practices gel in a team, and keeping up to date with changes to the codebase. It’s not just a barrier. I am old enough that my first 2 jobs were subversion-based (repo side, client side git-svn) and both teams didn't care about branching. It might have to do with how awkward subversion branches felt. Anyway, we would commit (in git lingo pull-rebase & commit) directly and we basically maintained the id of the last reviewed commit and jointly did PR reviews commit-by-commit with the code on the projector in the office. We had a joint look at code, everyone voiced their feedback ("I don't understand a variable name like `xzc`"), "where is the unit test", "I read in a blog post recently you are supposed to not use classes...". etc. pp. Sometimes fixes would be pushed right in the PR review session so you had the variable renamed 4 commits further. Anyway, in retrospect it worked surprisingly well at helping the team to develop a joint understanding of values & virtues that the team would like to maintain in their code base. This might of course be nostalgia of a dev looking back into their junior years. When we finally got pull-requests, we really felt thrown into the future. It was just great. But after a while I started to miss the direct conversations about code with fellow humans. And honestly I couldn't tell whether PR really improved the quality of the code base in the long run. They lowered the probability of bad code being committed to the code base, but also lowered the probability for a dev to just fix awkward things while they stumbled over them. |
At the same time, I expect your PM is delighted that you’re not wasting time getting distracted with all that yak shaving nonsense and are instead working on the next burndown ticket that has been assigned a t-shirt size and the appropriate number of story points.