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martinvonz | 2 months ago

I can pick only one? Perhaps automatic rebasing then, i.e. that all descendant commits and bookmarks (branches) are automatically updated when you rewrite a commit, e.g. by amending into it.

discuss

order

wakawaka28|2 months ago

I don't think I would want to rewrite all branches based on rewriting one of the ancestors of those branches. This only makes sense for local branches, and I just never have such a set of branches. Most rebases are to get ahead of upstream work, and I can't rewrite that. The rest are to rewrite commits that I made, and I collapse all those commits down periodically anyway. In the rare case I might be able to use this feature, rebasing all the other branches (realistically, probably like 1 or 2) would be easy enough to do manually with the feature described in this post. Rebasing and touching up commits is very easy with git interactive rebase. There are also features to automatically reorder commits with, e. g., `git commit --fixup` and `git rebase --autosquash`.

If you have others in mind then go ahead lol. I was just trying to make it easy.

martinvonz|2 months ago

> I don't think I would want to rewrite all branches based on rewriting one of the ancestors of those branches. This only makes sense for local branches, and I just never have such a set of branches.

Yes, it's only meant for local branches. When I used Git, I had a script for rebasing dependent branches. I remember that a coworker had written a similar script.

I think jj is generally more useful for people like me who often have lots of independent and dependent work in progress. If you mostly just have a one review at a time, there's much less benefit. Perhaps I would say that `jj undo` might be the most useful feature for users with simpler development (yes, I know about the reflog, but see the video I linked to in the other message).