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by mbrock
4398 days ago
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But this isn't really a newbie's guide to using Git, as far as I can tell. There are probably other texts that are more suitable for that purpose. This text was pretty useful for me as a refresher-type thing to clarify the basic data types and inner workings of Git. There are many, many people who have no problems with using the command line, and who in fact by default prefer it to GUI tools. The guide itself provides graphs and visual means of understanding, and explains how these representations relate to the CLI tools. Very helpful! I don't really agree with your complaint, because it seems like you're just saying "I would prefer to read a different kind of article," which is fine, but it's not a criticism. The argument about "alienating an even larger portion of your reader base" seems spurious; the author can write to whatever target audience they want! |
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But the fact of the matter is that the Git community is churning out articles such as this one left, right and centre, while ones at a more readily accessible level are being neglected, and therein lies the problem. While there are many, many people who do not have any problems with the command line tools, there are also many, many people who do -- especially in the Windows and .NET world. The fact that we have a glut of command-line focused low-level Git tutorials and a dearth of more readily accessible ones, combined with the common attitude in the Gitosphere of "if you're using GUI tools you're doing it wrong," paints a picture of Git to people such as these of an ecosystem that is elitist, arrogant and user-hostile.
It's nothing to do with the kind of article I'd like to read. It's everything to do with bad marketing.