> On Mar 10, 2019, at 08:31, Harley Leyton <[email protected]> wrote: > > -- The following is written in good faith for frank, honest discussion -- > > I began using hg many years ago, back when git had a horrible UI and didn't > work on Windows. Since then, git has become fully supported on Windows and > the UI has much improved. hg still has the edge for user-friendliness and > cross-platform support, but git has almost 100% of the mindshare and market. > > I've been stubbornly sticking with hg for hobby projects, but I almost never > encounter anything other than git in the open source and commercial worlds. > (I'm aware that hg is used in both, but this is a rare exception.) hg seems > to be going very much in the direction of bzr, although we're clearly not > there yet. > > I'm interested in more positive - but realistic - perspectives.
Mercurial's community remains pretty healthy, and if you've got a big-repo problem (Google, Facebook, Mozilla, etc) Mercurial will work for you *today*, whereas git will require significant engineering investment. I'd love to see better interop with git repos using hg's frontend, but haven't had time for that. I also think we're getting close to landing some of our novel history-editing functionality that allows safe collaborative history editing, which will be a pretty big advantage. AF > _______________________________________________ > Mercurial mailing list > [email protected] > https://www.mercurial-scm.org/mailman/listinfo/mercurial _______________________________________________ Mercurial mailing list [email protected] https://www.mercurial-scm.org/mailman/listinfo/mercurial
