this post was submitted on 10 Oct 2024
1 points (53.8% liked)
JetBrains
140 readers
2 users here now
A community for discussion and news relating to JetBrains and its products! https://www.jetbrains.com/
Related Communities
- !aqua@programming.dev
- !clion@programming.dev
- !datagrip@programming.dev
- !dataspell@programming.dev
- !fleet@programming.dev
- !goland@programming.dev
- !intellij@programming.dev
- !phpstorm@programming.dev
- !pycharm@programming.dev
- !rider@programming.dev
- !rubymine@programming.dev
- !rustrover@programming.dev
- !webstorm@programming.dev
Copyright ยฉ 2000-2024 JetBrains s.r.o. JetBrains and the JetBrains logo are registered trademarks of JetBrains s.r.o.
founded 9 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
"trust them" meaning trust github and gitlab?
@BatmanAoD Whatever tool people are using for their issues and/or PRs and/or VCS
And it's not about trusting the tool but trusting that the tool will always be available. Whether due to discontinuation of the tool itself or due to discontinued use of the tool and replacement by something else...
To be clear, you're saying you trust git metadata to be preserved even when forge/issue-tracking/etc metadata is not?
I suppose that's probably the case more often than not. I think it's still preferable to trust the forge you use than to spend any significant amount of time or effort trying to ensure that the team has strong enough commit-message discipline to compensate for the risk of losing data in an issue-tracker or forge.
@BatmanAoD so far I have seen more issue-trackes come and go than VCSs...
So yes: Training developers in commit-discipline would for me not be wasted time and money.
Cause from what I have seen so far the question is not *whether* the issue tracker changes but *when*.
But OTOH: That's just me (and some companies I worked at).
YMMV