For your use case, sure. You're ignoring that other people might find it very helpful for theirs.
Use your preferred tools, and let others request ones for themselves. Adding in Apple file versioning in no way impinges or alters your ability to use a more suitable tool for yourself, so I'm at a loss as to why you felt the need to speak out against it.
Now, if you're suggesting that file difference highlighting be layered over the top of Apple versioning, great, that sounds like a nice enhancement, and I'm sure that we can have an interesting discussion on the technical feasibility. However, it sounds more like you're simply saying "Well *I* don't think it's useful so we shouldn't go that direction." That isn't very productive.
-- Jason
On Oct 17, 2014, at 8:39, Berend Hasselman bhh@xs4all.nl wrote:
On 17-10-2014, at 17:33, Igor K me@igorkozlov.me wrote:
Well I use Git myself a lot, but mostly for development.
Sometimes though I’m working on some random text files, like articles or markdowns that are not being versioned and initing a git repository for each and every of them sounds like a really bad idea.
I see your point but Apple versions doesn’t show or highlight differences. And that's what I don’t like about it.
Berend
And I know for sure that not only developers use TextMate, so I was thinking that those people would also gladly embrace some simple versioning.
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