I estimate that on a weekly basis I bugger things up using git, and either lose work or have to do much more work to retrieve it
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Replying to @blahah404 @ctitusbrown
I've been using git since about 2012 and this is the first time I've done this.
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Replying to @o_guest @ctitusbrown
*peers disappointedly at idiot in the mirror*
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Replying to @blahah404 @o_guest
I have file failure (delete major thing) once every year at least. Often unrelated to git - just trigger happy / rm -fr.
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Replying to @ctitusbrown @o_guest
Hmm this is also something I mess up with a much higher frequency. Starting to wonder if i should ditch this whole gig and take up painting.
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Replying to @blahah404 @ctitusbrown
Oh, God. Nobody is an idiot! I'm sad I deleted it but it's OK I mean I remember what I did.
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This certainly was trigger happy rm important-file.ipynb
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so people alias the rm command so that it puts things in a trash folder for exactly this reason. I don't and make the same mistake sometimes
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live fast & delete important things quickly. never look back.
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Replying to @ctitusbrown @walkingrandomly and
software engineers have made computers make people feel stupid. And I'm sad about it.
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@walkingrandomly it wasn't literally the rm command, I deleted it using the trash can icon in jupyter.
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which goes to show "are you sure you want to delete X?" doesn't cut it in every case
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