> And I don't get why people keep trying to convince me that I do. It's about me, my opinion should have some value, right? :-)
I have no problem whatsoever if you don't like jj or use git or whatever else you like.
Let's paddle back:
- you are in post about jj
- you comment why you don't like jj
- I comment why I like jj
- you post that.
Like, what is your intention here? If you don't have good faith into trying to understand the tooling, how would it fit your workflow and deflects everything with "I know git, git works, don't tell me to use something else" what is your goal here?
My problem is not your opinion on the tool, is how you approach the debate.
I have been asking a few questions, and I have received many answers quickly. Which is usually great, but between the "those who don't use jj haven't seen the light and must be in a cult" and the "jj is better because git is impossible to use everyday", it's honestly been harder than anticipated :-).
> And I don't get why people keep trying to convince me that I do. It's about me, my opinion should have some value, right? :-)
I have no problem whatsoever if you don't like jj or use git or whatever else you like.
Let's paddle back:
- you are in post about jj
- you comment why you don't like jj
- I comment why I like jj
- you post that.
Like, what is your intention here? If you don't have good faith into trying to understand the tooling, how would it fit your workflow and deflects everything with "I know git, git works, don't tell me to use something else" what is your goal here?
My problem is not your opinion on the tool, is how you approach the debate.