- cross-posted to:
- vcs@programming.dev
- git@programming.dev
- hackernews@lemmy.smeargle.fans
- cross-posted to:
- vcs@programming.dev
- git@programming.dev
- hackernews@lemmy.smeargle.fans
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Neat hack, but IMO this just loses waaay too many features and UX that Github et al. have. Only masochists will use this. Here are a few I can think of:
- From a user perspective it’s “simpler” in that it saves maybe 1 command…
git push
(I’ve still going to want to make a branch), and clicking on the “create a PR” link. But you’ve also made updating a PR way more of a pain - it wasgit push
, now it’s… I dunno some long command I don’t remember and looking up a PR number in the web interface? - Can’t request reviews from people.
- Can’t enforce review requirements.
- Can’t require review comments to be resolved (I bet it’s easy to miss review comments!)
- Can’t easily tell who wrote review comments. Are you really supposed to have a conversation by adding
// Dave: I agree
under comments? - Can’t add comments to code that doesn’t support comments (e.g.
packages.json
) - No CI integration.
I guess some of those are fixable, but overall this seems like a clever hack but very clunky.
I guess it’s better than a mailing list at least.
- From a user perspective it’s “simpler” in that it saves maybe 1 command…
Suggestion to the dev: Add a (perhaps optional) review step between pushing a patch via ssh and having it show up for consideration by the project maintainers. This would give the submitter a chance to look over what was sent via ssh, allowing for mistakes to be noticed and corrected, and perhaps reducing noise and embarrassment.