How often does grandpa ask you what GitHub is?
Comment on what's the difference?
purelynonfunctional@programming.dev 11 months agoDepends on to whom. If you’re explaining to your grandma, a small child, or a co-worker, you probably don’t want an explanation that relies on reference to a porn site.
And if you’re explaining to a novice developer or to an IT person who sometimes might have to work with Git, they need an explanation that leaves them with a basic understanding of the kinds of things Git and GitHub are (namely, VCSes and SCM forges, respectively), not just an inkling that GitHub is not unique in being ‘a place to host (some?) Git, whatever that is’.
So if you don’t mind that it suggests ‘GitHub is for uploading Git(s)’, it’s an okay way to teach ‘the difference between Git and GitHub’ to non-technical, non-elderly adults who don’t really need to know what Git is (and don’t work with you or study under you).
That’s an explanation of pretty damn narrow usefulness, to put it generously.
CanadaPlus@futurology.today 11 months ago
spiderplant@lemm.ee 11 months ago
I agree that porn is a nsfw way to explain something in a lot of scenarios but I disagree about people needing to know at least the names of a technology from an explanation.
Most people don’t need to know or care about the names to understand or use them. Knowing the names after I learnt the commands did not give me greater insight into how the tool works.
If they are just being introduced to git and github then they are likely new to programming and have much more important things to care about like learning their first programming language or understanding how their teams project actually works.
A place to host gits is a perfectly good explanation for anyone who is new to it.