Thanks for the question. It makes me realize where my video falls short: It shows the "chaos" commit and the structured ones, but not how to get from A to B. The goal is to get this clean structure, but that doesn't mean things are always this structured and linear when you're working on them. I should probably make another, more hands-on video to demonstrate the process.
I don't really leave comments on YT, but this video was recommended by the algorithm, and it was very useful! Will recommend it to my coworkers. Thanks!
Thanks, Leander! I only recently started this channel and don't have an audience yet, so I'm glad the algorithm reached you. I have more content in the works, and I hope it'll be useful for you too.
I mean, yeah, this looks very nice, but who in reality is this structured when implementing a change?
Thanks for the question. It makes me realize where my video falls short: It shows the "chaos" commit and the structured ones, but not how to get from A to B. The goal is to get this clean structure, but that doesn't mean things are always this structured and linear when you're working on them. I should probably make another, more hands-on video to demonstrate the process.
I don't really leave comments on YT, but this video was recommended by the algorithm, and it was very useful! Will recommend it to my coworkers. Thanks!
Thanks, Leander! I only recently started this channel and don't have an audience yet, so I'm glad the algorithm reached you. I have more content in the works, and I hope it'll be useful for you too.
Different people have different strategies. If you're not a fan of atomic commits, what do you use instead? Share it with us!
Every React project is a flaming heap of pointless commit noise no matter what you do.
Maybe not every project, but some people definitely want to watch the world burn 😄