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Git

Git

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Git is a widely used version control system that offers a range of use cases for different teams and organizations. Engineering and …
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Git it today

10 out of 10
January 20, 2020
Incentivized
Git is currently being used for version control in our IT department. This allows us to not only keep various projects under source …
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Reviews and Ratings

(74)

Community Insights

TrustRadius Insights are summaries of user sentiment data from TrustRadius reviews and, when necessary, 3rd-party data sources. Have feedback on this content? Let us know!

Git is a widely used version control system that offers a range of use cases for different teams and organizations. Engineering and dev-ops teams rely on Git to handle version control of codebases, allowing them to create branches for features and bug fixes. By using Git, they can easily merge and release code to different environments, ensuring smooth software development processes.

Freelance software developers also find value in Git as it enables them to work on multiple machines and platforms, providing flexibility and backup of source code. They appreciate the ability to easily manage and track changes in their codebase, ensuring effective collaboration with clients and the ability to revert back if needed.

Organizations benefit from Git's ability to store source code across multiple repositories and branches. They typically have a mainline development branch for code review and automated builds, allowing for efficient management of projects. Git addresses the problem of multiple people updating a codebase by managing merging of changes, storing committed changes in a log for review, and offering rollback options when necessary.

Furthermore, Git fosters collaboration and code contribution among developers by preventing conflicts and facilitating efficient software development. It is successfully utilized by various departments like Tech Writing and Implementation, helping streamline release cycles and integrating smoothly with other tools like Bitbucket for pull requests.

Additionally, Git is an essential tool for managing app development processes. Its usage ensures faster release of changes while minimizing negative impacts on existing functionalities. Many companies rely on Git to manage massive codebases and enable cross-team code review, making it a reliable solution for tracking project progress and ensuring software security vulnerabilities are addressed.

Overall, Git's ease of use and cleaner approach to version control have received praise from users. It is widely recognized as stable and reliable for managing code, providing a centralized area for sharing and collaborating on projects across different teams.

In summary, whether it's handling version control, managing projects for customers, tracking changes in websites or internal scripting projects, or enabling concurrent work, Git proves to be a valuable and versatile tool for developers, freelancers, and organizations alike.

Users commonly recommend learning Git thoroughly to utilize its benefits for code repository management, version control, and team collaboration. They emphasize the importance of utilizing the command line interface and following established processes for branching and merging. Users also encourage exploring advanced features, seeking support from online resources like Stackoverflow, and considering other alternatives if needed. Overall, users consider Git to be an essential tool with excellent features and community support in the software development realm.

Attribute Ratings

Reviews

(1-10 of 10)
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Gabriel Freire | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Git is a software version control system that enables distributed collaboration of engineers working all over the world. It allows for development on parallel features, acting as the source of truth for code, and also detects and helps solve conflicts that might arise from collaboration on the same files.<br>I'd say Git is one of those systems that are pretty much omnipresent when it comes to the Tech industry at this point. I haven't come across a simpler, better distributed version system yet.
  • Version Control
  • Conflict Resolution
  • Collaborative Work
  • UI
  • Learning Curve
Git is suited not only for software work, or the tech industry as a whole. It's true it's the most obvious use but I've recommended Git for people in various industries, from finance to art. The truth is that if you're working on files that are meant to be worked on by other people as well, in a collaborative effort, I would without a doubt recommend Git.
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Git is one of the source code version control tools used at my organization. We are using Git (Gitlab) to store our source code across multiple repositories. We have a mainline development branch which all our new code is eventually pushed to after being code reviewed by their branch using pull requests.
  • Ability to create branches and merge those changes in.
  • Diff-ing changes.
  • Many different GUIs, many people.
  • Understanding Git has a little bit more of a learning curve when compared to other source control solutions.
Developers can work parallel on projects, increasing the speed at which teams can work, thus causing projects to complete faster. Git has saved our organization hours of having to manually trace code to a breaking change or manage conflicting changes.
February 12, 2019

Git things done

Cristian Bodnarasec | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
In our organization, Git is used by several departments for file versioning, collaborative work on the same source code, change tracking, branch merging, version comparison etc. Especially because we have distributed teams all over the world, we needed a reliable tool to achieve these goals, and Git was the natural choice.
  • File versioning - easy to see the history of the changes.
  • Collaborative work on the same source code -- by providing the ability to create branches.
  • Merging branches and comparing versions made easy.
  • It is free and open source.
  • Git is so popular that when hiring, it is easy to find developers who already know this.
  • To use Git at its full capabilities, one needs to spend some time learning it.
  • Command line usage may be an issue to developers used more with GUIs. For those, you may need to add a free GUI or purchase something like Bitbucket.
  • Merging code when there are conflicts can be difficult sometimes from the command line.
  • Git may have bundled in more features that it needs. Most people just need the basics: pull, edit, push, merge.
Git is suited for doing source code versioning of all-size projects, from small to large and very large. Does very well when you have distributed teams, as it increases the team's focus, collaboration, decreases the time needed for merging code and finding differences between file versions, and decreases the time needed to make a software release. Therefore, the time to market of new projects or new features is improved (any top manager's desire).
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Git is our core version control tool in my company and it is used not only in our development department but in multiple other departments like Tech Writing and Implementation. In development, we use Git to track our development changes and to organize our release cycles with different branches to track our stages. We utilize tools that integrate with Git like Bitbucket to have a front end UI that helps us manage things like pull requests, which are branches off of QA for development changes we would like to add to release. Git is the core infrastructure in what we do here and I have been using it every day for the past 6 years.
  • Ability to create branches off current releases to modify code that can be tested in a separate environment.
  • Each developer had their own local copy of branches so it minimizes mistakes being made.
  • Has a user-friendly UI called Git Gui that users can use if they do not like using the command line.
  • Conflicts are displayed nicely so that developers can resolve with ease.
  • Sometimes conflicts arise over white space which can be annoying.
  • You cannot do any advanced features in the built-in GUI, you have to use an application like Bitbucket for these things.
  • It can have a very high learning curve for new users because there are so many commands and things you can do that it gets very complex very fast.
Git is well suited for development, for tracking code changes in files, creating branches off projects to create pull requests that get merged back in, etc. It is used for anything we want to track on a computer like Source code, SQL scripts, documentation (Html/PDF/word docs), and project files for applications. Not really appropriate for backing files up just to have a backup, google drive is a better option for that.
Chris Martin | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Git is being used throughout our organization by the majority of the development teams--custom app development and off-the-shelf customized products. We primarily use Git as a source-code management, a repository, and for revision control and deployment (integrated with other apps to support this function). Being on a large software development team with multiple different developers pitching in on in-house applications, it's essential that we have a tool like Git to manage multiple processes involved with app development. Git allows us to release development changes faster and minimizes potentially negative impacts to our production releases. I also use Git for personal hobby and freelance projects.
  • Git allows for collaborative development projects, without worrying about impacting the master revision. By using branches in Git, developers can get a messy as they want, knowing that they can revert to a previous revision.
  • The ability for co-located and remote teams to develop on a single project independently. From a business perspective, this allows you to strengthen your team by not limiting your employee or team selection processes to a specific geographical location. It also eliminates the requirement for a physical centralized location for co-workers to meet and work.
  • Git allows for code-comparison so that developers can see what changes they're merging together.
  • One of my biggest gripes with Git is the learning curve. Although I am now fairly seasoned, I vividly remember the struggle to learn the ins-and-outs of Git when I first started using it. It has come a long way since I first started using Git, so there are now a lot of fixes to age-old problems, as well as GUI interfaces and 3rd party integrations, eliminating a lot of the initial learning curve for newbies.
Git is best suited for storing and managing source code in a local or remote repository. For example, myself and 5 other developer friends are working on a hobby app, but we all work full-time, busy lives, and have no clear deadline in mind to develop this app. Each of us can develop our portions of the app independently on our own time, remotely checking-in our source-code revisions to a centralized repository. As each of us pushes our code to the repository, we can begin to merge the code together into a single revision. Let's say Joe (made up friend name) decides to go a little wild and releases some really experimental code that causes the rest of the app to fail when put into production. Since we used Git, it's easy for us to revert back to a previous release, removing Joe's code changes and fixing the issues with the release.
Joel Tanzi | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Our organization uses Git for code versioning, namely to track and manage changes to the codebase in a way that avoids accidentally writing over another engineer's code, resolves change conflicts, and provides a rollback option in the event of a breaking change. Git has become an important part of the development workflow for most software engineering teams. The problem Git addresses for us is the problem of having multiple people updating a codebase. One developer might change a portion of the code in one area and another might change it somewhere else, and managing the merging of these changes together is the main job of Git. To facilitate this Git stores every committed change in a log, and this log can be reviewed and even used to roll the code back and reject changes further down the pipeline. In our organization, each engineer creates a new branch from the master codebase whenever they are starting a new task in the project, and once they have completed that task and confirmed the code is stable, the code can be merged into the master codebase and eventually included in the production build. Our team has a strict policy of not merging your own code, so the code is reviewed and approved by another engineer whom merges it in after assessing its impact. We use Git across our engineering department only.
  • Git manages the merging of changes from different team members and provides for a way to roll back those changes when necessary.
  • Git allows for management of multiple branches of a code project and merging them in through a controlled and considered manner.
  • Git provides a complete history of all code changes and who made them, making the process of identifying when breaking code came in a much easier one along with identifying the code to roll back to (when needed).
  • Git is a powerful tool for change management and avoiding breaking code making its way into production.
  • Git has a steep learning curve in that it has traditionally been used through the command-line interface, and has a lengthy set of commands you must learn how to use to work with it efficiently. Fortunately, there are some good GUI-based applications to help you with this, but to really be a Git master you will have to know how to use in from the console.
  • At times it can be difficult to determine just what action is appropriate when a mistake has been made in a Git commit. A deep understanding of how Git works can be required to correctly navigate the steps to recover from a bad commit.
  • Git could benefit from an overhaul of its command syntax to focus on the subset of Git commands that most developers use all the time.
  • Some Git commands have names that can prompt misunderstandings as to what they actually do. A prime example of this is "git blame" which simply tells you whom made a specific change to the code, but sounds like it is going to automatically report someone to their boss for a dressing-down.
Git is very well suited for teams of software engineers who are collaborating on a software project. It makes life much easier for project managers, team leads and software architects to make decisions about which code to allow in and which to send back to the drawing board. It can also be a good tool for solo developers to use to manage and showcase their codebase and is, in fact, the versioning system on which the most popular code hosting platform, GitHub, is built on.

Git has at times been used for less technical content such as document management, but this may be a less appealing tool for non-technical professionals such as writers, whom may not want to deal with its learning curve and may find tools built into MS Office or Google Drive to be sufficient to manage document versions.
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Git is being used by our organization on an information technology department level. We use Git as our sole Version Control system for all of our software releases, maintenance & deployment.
  • Git is designed to work in a distributed manner, allowing each developer to run a local node that has full control of the project. Through this, the developer is able to merge his work with others on a main 'branch' & work in sync without having to worry about stepping on your other developers toes.
  • Because Git has solved the software problem of dependency, users who commit code that needs to be deleted can just roll back to a restore point, saving precious development time & tons of headaches for Information Technology. This is also very helpful when cloning projects or creating new features on the current project.
  • Git has a beautiful command line interface that is intuitive, easy to learn & extensible. You can also observe all the changes you have made in your project throughout the development with just a few simple commands. This diverse set of command-line tools is easy for the end user & very powerful.
  • There is currently no way to avoid downloading the entire commit history of a repository into the local copy - this can be problematic when cloning projects that have a history of many working submodules & packages.
  • Advanced configurations (managing multiple branches, having commands that take 2+ arguments) can sometimes be overwhelming for inexperienced users & there is definitely a learning slope for new developers.
  • You have to be precise when you use your git commands. The nature of Git commands are powerful. So powerful that if you don't know what you are doing and accidentally type a wrong command, you can cause irrevocable damage to your repository & others.
Git is a great tool, in fact, possibly the best tool to use when keeping track of all the projects through version control. Through its rigorous program, it allows the end user to see how code behaves before being merged into the main branch, and allows the intelligent user to avoid problems & fix them if necessary. It is easy to learn the common verbiage (clone, add, commit, pull & push) but at the same time have all advanced features that you can need in a future (merge, cherry pick, diffs ...) It is faster than other version control solutions currently on the market, & because it's open source it's just the best go-to for Version Control Software.
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Git is mainly used in my organisation by the technical team who are mainly responsible for project delivery. It provides us with an avenue for version control and code management. It addresses the risk of time and effort loss during project implementation.
  • Version control and backups
  • Branching and merging
  • Open source
  • High learning curve for beginners
  • Primarily aimed at technical users
  • Built-in GUI is hard to navigate and use.
Very suitable for the project implementation stage, where version control is required. It is more suitable for files that mainly involve text formatting for change/version tracking. It is less appropriate in situations where entire files change rapidly on each commit (e.g. image/graphic design files). Git is less suited for management personnel.
David Petrie | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Git is one of the source code version control tools used at my organization (the other major one being Subversion). We are using Git to store our source code across multiple repositories and branches (features and bugs). We have a mainline development branch which all our new code is eventually pushed to, after being code reviewed by their branch using pull requests. The development branch in our Git repositories are polled for any changes, and builds are automatically run to verify the code.
  • Branching
  • What I find as the main benefit of Git is the ease that branches can be created in a repository - whether that's for working on new features or to fix bugs. It's as easy as selecting the code you want to branch from and "git checkout -b newBranch". Mainly I use this for branching from our development branch (also known as trunk) and once the code is finished, we merge the branch back into the development branch. Switching branches in Subversion is a little bit more complex, whereas Git is super easy to use.
  • Pull Requests
  • Pull requests can be created on a repository allowing code to be reviewed before being merged to the main branch. External tools like Bitbucket can be used to integrate into the Git repositories, allowing users to easily review and comment on your pull requests.
  • Local Repositories
  • When you use Git, you checkout the repository to your machine locally - and any commits that you make only affect your local repository, rather than the "real" repository at a remote location. This allows you to commit often and finalize all of your code before merging onto the latest development branch.
  • Understanding
  • Git has a little bit more of a learning curve when compared to other source control solutions, e.g. Subversion - but this is due to the more complex features it offers.
  • IDE Support
  • There aren't as many plugins for Git when compared to other source control solutions. Subversion has better plugins for IDEs and seems to be well supported.
  • Git Bash
  • Using Git bash, or the GUI that comes with Git can be slightly daunting at first. Tools like SourceTree are a solution to this problem, as they run the underlying Git commands for you.
Git is perfect for any micro-repository solutions, as it can checkout source code quickly and switch between branches easily. For example, let's say you have a new feature to add to a microservice your working on, a feature branch can be created quickly, and the working copy can be automatically switched to that new branch. If you ever need to share your code to a wider public audience, Github is great for this. Anyone with an account can check out and comment on your code and suggest changes. Also, Git is free!

As for a scenario where you wouldn't want to use Git, I've heard that Git can struggle with image files (jpg, gif) sometimes, so users with lots of images may want another solution.
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
We are currently using Git for all of our marketing websites. We're using it to save versions of code as a backup, to track changes and to see when changes were made and by whom. It helps us track updates for our clients and enables our team to work on the same sites concurrently.
  • Code backups
  • Code tracking
  • Branching
  • Team development
  • Git has a learning curve
Git is amazing at helping teams of developers collaborate on sites. It allows them to work at the same time by utilizing branches, then merging in with the main branch. It allows developers to track their code and submit bug requests as well as comments on bug fixes.
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