Jujutsu is essentially an alternative front-end or “porcelain” to git, both magnificiently simplified and powerful.
I tried it after using Emacs Magit for about six or seven years, and jujutsu is really easier to use than git and useful if one wants a tidy public history of changes (with “tidy” and “public” as Linus Torvalds recommends). Plus it is fully compatible to git as backend - other contributors will not even note you are using it.
Hrm… It looks interesting but it seems too dedicated to crafting “the perfect commit”.
I don’t want to “evolve a commit” - I want to capture my changes over time. If I decide later that I want to prepare the commit for merging I will.
I hate it because it’s different - but even trying to give it a “benefit of the doubt” I really can’t see this as better. It’s not like it’s difficult to create a “tidy” commit with git as is.
And as far as “easier to use goes”… well… Here’s how you get a list of anonymous branches
jj log -r 'heads(all())'
And since they eschew branches with names you get to memorize hash strings instead of branch names that describe the thing you were doing?
jj new pzoqtwuv yykpmnuq -m "merge better documentation" # vs. git merge my_branch_Name
I’m unconvinced. Though
jj undo
looks neat (and also crazy dangerous unless you can undo an undo?).