-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 929
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Lesson Contribution: Define GIT #890
Comments
@Talishask thanks for forwarding the contribution. |
More background on the word git, according to readme.md as part of the source code,
Published in 2005, "When asked why he called the new software, "git," British slang meaning "a rotten person," [Torvalds] said. "I'm an egotistical bastard, so I name all my projects after myself. First Linux, now git."" And, it should probably be noted that Git was developed as an open source alternative to BitKeeper. |
That said, do I think this bit of information needs to be included in the lesson? It's not truly an acronym - unlike Bash, which is commonly enough called Bourne Again SHell in places that it's important for learners to know that the term is interchangeable with the phrase. I think it's interesting knowledge for an instructor to have - all of it, that is, including Torvalds calling himself a 'git' - in response to the odd question of "why is git called git." But, I think it's akin to asking why is R called R (in response to S), or Python called Python (because the developer took it from Monty Python). It shouldn't be a learning objective, which is what questions are based upon. The information is more flavor than anything else. |
Whether it's *Global Information Tracker* or *Stupid Content Tracker, *or
something else. We need to include this in the lesson for *content
completeness*.
…On Wed, Aug 31, 2022 at 5:34 PM K.E. Koziar ***@***.***> wrote:
That said, do I think this bit of information needs to be included in the
lesson?
It's not truly an acronym - unlike Bash, which is commonly enough called
Bourne Again SHell in places that it's important for learners to know that
the term is interchangeable with the phrase.
I think it's interesting knowledge for an instructor to have - all of it,
that is, including Torvalds calling himself a 'git - in response to the odd
question of "why is git called git." But, I think it's akin to asking why
is R called R (in response to S), or Python called Python (because the
developer took it from Monty Python). It shouldn't be a learning objective,
which is what questions are based upon. The information is more flavor than
anything else.
—
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
<#890 (comment)>,
or unsubscribe
<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AGXWO46SOGRS5J42632S363V37FXPANCNFSM6AAAAAAQBVZE5I>
.
You are receiving this because you are subscribed to this thread.Message
ID: ***@***.***>
|
How do you propose including it - and, "global information tracker" is nowhere in end-user documentation - while keeping the lesson welcoming, respectful, courteous, and professional? |
This is the official information about the name, as provided in the README of git's source code. |
@kekoziar Perhaps we can add something in the |
I'm a member of The Carpentries Core Team and I'm submitting this issue on behalf of another member of the community. In most cases, I won't be able to follow up or provide more details other than what I'm providing below.
questions:
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: