John Yates writes: 1+-- well said and well explained!> On Sat, Jul 8, 2017 at 1:42 PM, raman wrote: >> >> There are many things that Git lets you do that are at the power-user >> end of the spectrum --- an > d magit actually makes those doable, whereas >> the git commandline would never encourage you to venture even close. > > I mentioned earlier in this thread that because Magit is so compelling I > use it to induce susceptible colleagues to try emacs. Let me elaborate. > > I work at a company that is trying to up its software engineering > practices. An important part of that effort is mandating code reviews. > That alone though does not result in particularly useful reviews or > feedback. The main obstacle is that developers work until a task is > complete and then submit all of their changes as a single, overwhelming > review request. > > There are developers within the company who are familiar with patch > series culture as exemplified by the Gnu/Linux kernel. Others, though > having no first hand experience, understand the ideas and acknowledge > that offering code for review as a well groomed patch series would be > a big improvement. The problem is that in the real world code never > gets designed / authored / debugged such that it emerges naturally as > an intelligible, coherent patch series. It takes real work to extract > such a series. And of course most developers have absolutely no idea > idea how they would go about turning a workspace or even a chaotic > series of incremental commits into such a series. > > That is where Magit shines. It allows one to move arbitrary chunks > of code forward and back among a sequence of commits. As such it > gives a developer a concrete visualization of the emerging commits > and their contents. Nor is one restricted to moving hunks identified > by a diff tool. In Magit a chunk can just as easily be an arbitrary > marked region. > > When I demo Magit for my colleagues they immediately get excited. > It makes it clear that fostering a patch series culture need not be > a pipe dream. > > To date I am unaware of any other tool on any platform offering > similar functionality. > > Were an emacs user to ask me to suggest a package (s)he should use > to interact with git I would always plug Magit. Not that I would > discourage learning VC. Clearly (as Raman has explained) VC has a > role. Magit though alters how one thinks about presenting one's > coding efforts to the greater world. > > /john  > --