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a10c | 1 year ago

I mean that's the point of the article, no?

With Jujutsu it's not at all complicated. Sure, you may not agree with the example (and I would say its a little contrived), but rebasing into history to keep a clean progression of commits in a feature branch that is unreleased is something that many people are keen on.

Jujutsu also has a bunch of other really useful features like `jj fix` which can run a code linter over a linear commit history (in parallel) and integrate the changes into the commits that should contain the change. This avoids a litany of 'fix formatting' style commits littered through your history.

discuss

order

arxanas|1 year ago

> rebasing into history to keep a clean progression of commits in a feature branch that is unreleased is something that many people are keen on

To give some specific examples, "many people" includes popular open-source projects like Linux and Git itself, as well as large tech companies like Google and Meta, which employ "trunk-based development" (see e.g. https://trunkbaseddevelopment.com).