Do you have a story to share?

  • rudyharrelson
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    781 year ago

    A couple of years ago, I was modding a fresh install of Skyrim and thought, “I can use git branches to make it easy to switch between different mod combinations rather than uninstalling/reinstalling mods when something breaks or when I want to change things up.” Worked well!

    I had branches that were mostly vanilla with enhancements, and then branches that had all kinds of ridiculous mods. If I wanted to switch to playing a ridiculous build of Skyrim, I’d just close the game, checkout the branch I wanted, and start the game.

    • folkrav
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      31 year ago

      Interesting! Didn’t slow up too much with all the binary files? I guess you weren’t swapping around sets of 300 content mods either lol

      • rudyharrelson
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        11 year ago

        It’s been a couple of years, but I don’t recall it being particularly slow switching between branches. I had a pretty beefy rig to begin with, which probably helped.

    • Deebster
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      21 year ago

      I wish all rules, Ts&Cs, contracts, etc came like this. It might make it less unfeasible to follow what’s changed when something forces you to agree to the new version of the terms.

  • @RonSijm@programming.dev
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    201 year ago

    I use it to backup my save games. Not sure if that’s conventional.

    For example, I’d MKLink %appdata%/Local/Pal/Save/ to a folder in my save repo, and commit that every once in a while.

    • 7heo
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      1 year ago

      Fun story, in 2012 I got the idea of making a git based “cloud” save system with branching, to explore multiple story paths in games.

      I implemented the FileSystemWatcher (the equivalent to Linux’s inotify) component in C# on Windows, was able to detect when games were saved, and commit that to git, and stopped there.

      Feel free to implement that, I’d love to save on implementation time 😇

  • Ephera
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    181 year ago

    I wanted to automate the setup of my desktop environment, but didn’t know what got changed in the individual config files when I tweaked a setting in the UI.

    So, I did a git init in ~/.config/, added all files to an initial commit, and then made the change in the UI. Afterwards, a git diff showed the exact changes I wanted.

  • @cafuneandchill@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I used it once for version controlling my master’s when I was writing it. I wrote it in Markdown with Pandoc syntax, so it worked. I eventually gave up and just used LibreOffice, though, since it was a hassle

  • shnizmuffin
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    71 year ago

    Tracking season-by-season changes to my fantasy football league’s charter.

    Business logic mermaid diagrams installed as a submodule in every projects repo.

  • @atomkarinca@lemmygrad.ml
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    41 year ago

    ifc-git.

    ifc is an iso standard for 3d construction projects, which includes all aspects of a building data. because ifc is in human-readable form, versions of the same project can be diffed, hence ifc git.

    this is a really underappreciated project.

  • @Corbin@programming.dev
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    41 year ago

    I’ve put ASTs directly into git repositories by encoding each leaf as a blob and each tree as a tree. Since git objects are content-addressed, this gives deduplication of ASTs for free, including CSE for sufficiently-pure ASTs.

  • Swordgeek
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    31 year ago

    Not very clever or rare, but extremely useful. On my persistent Unix/Linux boxes, I “git branch /etc” as soon as it comes up. Then all of my admin config gets committed whenever it’s changed.

  • xcjs
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    31 year ago

    I tried to take hourly snapshots of an already-large Minecraft world using Git, but after a few years of snapshots, the repository became corrupted.

    One of the issues was that regardless of any player-based changes that occurred, the spawn regions were always different as they were always loaded in memory.

  • @madeindjs@programming.dev
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    21 year ago

    I just discovered from So You Think You Know Git - FOSDEM 2024 that you can use Git to generate columns:

    seq 1 24 | git column --mode=column --padding=5
    

    Will render:

    1      3      5      7      9      11     13     15     17     19     21     23
    2      4      6      8      10     12     14     16     18     20     22     24
    

    It can be useful to list files / permissions in a directory in multiples columns

    ls -lah | git column --mode=column --padding=5
    

    (Ok, it’s useless)