The post is also super rambling in the middle section.
I have to assume that this is something similar to Mercurial's MQ plugin or Stacked Git (stgit), which allow you to manage revisions as a stack of diffs.
I personally enjoy using stgit, and it fits just fine into the world of feature branches and PRs.
This part scared me:
In a Stacked Branch workflow, you are creating branches for each of your atomic commits, and then you're defining the relationships between those branches so it can formally store a directed acyclic graph of those relationships.
Why do you want to make a separate branch for every commit? That sounds like a nightmare, and it's definitely not the intended workflow for git.
OK but what is “Git Patch Stacks”? It seems like I’m missing something fundamental that was never actually explained in this post.
Yes, sorry. The post doesn't provide the full context as it is just a post covering the goals of Git Patch Stack.
Git Patch Stack is a tool that works with Git to facilitate a "Patch Stack" based workflow in a manner that also maps seemlessly to the Feature Branch/Pull Request model of GitHub, Bitbucket, GitLab, etc. that the majority of the development communities use. https://git-ps.sh is the official website for it. https://github.com/uptech/git-ps-rs is the repository.
The post is also super rambling in the middle section.
I have to assume that this is something similar to Mercurial’s MQ plugin or Stacked Git (stgit), which allow you to manage revisions as a stack of diffs.
I personally enjoy using stgit, and it fits just fine into the world of feature branches and PRs.
Thanks for the feedback abound rambling. In relation to stgit Git Patch Stack is a bit different as it tries to really facilitate Git and doesn't have any internal state it tracks (previous versions did). Now it is really more of just a different way of viewing the state of the Git tree in a way that makes sense in terms of a "Patch Stack" based workflow. I think it also differs in that it is trying to be companion app to Git so that a user can and should use both Git and Git Patch Stack together. Git Patch Stack also tries to align the commands as much as possible around normal git concepts and commands.
This part scared me:
In a Stacked Branch workflow, you are creating branches for each of your atomic commits, and then you’re defining the relationships between those branches so it can formally store a directed acyclic graph of those relationships.
Why do you want to make a separate branch for every commit? That sounds like a nightmare, and it’s definitely not the intended workflow for git.
The "Stacked Branch" workflow is a different workflow than "Patch Stack" based workflow. I agree with you that you shouldn't want to manage branches or the relations between. That is why the "Patch Stack" based workflow that Git Patch Stack facilitates eliminates this. However, there are a lot of people out there that are using a "Stacked Branch" based workflow and tooling around it like https://graphite.dev that do manage branches for each atomic commit and building a DAG (directed acyclic graph) defining their relationships so that their tooling can do things like automate rebasing, etc.