Git makes a lot more sense thought of as a content-addressable filesystem the designer of which had "absolutely no interest in creating a traditional SCM system." (Not intended as snark! It's the real literal answer to a lot of my "why the heck is this like this?" questions.)
My interest in this is largely psychological. I am not a filesystem expert and don't apply any deep knowledge of the subject to help me understand Git. I've often thought that every command should be intelligible from the point of view of version control. [1/N]
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And all of them have *some interpretation* with respect to version control. But thinking of them as filesystem operations first helps me keep in mind that some are more and less useful from the point of view of version control. [2/N]
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It's an interface issue, I think. It's not just that the internals are filesystem internals; it's that in a lot of ways the interface is a filesystem interface, not a version control one. So, translating between a VCS job I want to do and a Git command is often nontrivial. [3/N]
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