last week i got to witness an engineering department lose a full day's work because if you put an emoji in a git commit message, Atlassian Bamboo chokes on it forever and you're forced to rebase master, like you should NEVER DO. this was of course referred to as The Emojiency
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I had the same impression, but I'd still prefer English, or your natural language of choice. I don't know about you, but I can read and understand English much faster than I can guess what an emoji is supposed to be telling me, barring a few very very obvious ones.
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The second sentence is the one I'm challenging. English is far more ambiguous than emojis. A
is always the same, but there's like two different meanings for "disentangle", four different meanings for "clean up" and
for "refactor". - 9 more replies
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still for unforced errors.
English has changed more since 1998 than emojis have.