ranting_sandfish

joined 2 years ago
[–] ranting_sandfish@mander.xyz 2 points 4 months ago

Luckily you can turn it off and use the standard 'add' workflow. I did that almost reflexively when I started trying to use jj. (snapshot.auto-track)

However, over time, and once I got the .gitignore fully set up for bigger projects, I've come around on re-enabling autocommit for more of my repos. It does flow pretty naturally once you have an established process. I find it enables both better 'undo', and more seamless context-switching.

You can also set a more specific snapshot.auto-track on a repo or user basis for personal tooling conventions that don't make sense to gitignore.

[–] ranting_sandfish@mander.xyz 3 points 9 months ago

For me it was done as a part of a series of images, all focusing on imaging the injured finger and getting other stuff out of the way. The tech was very particular about how everything was oriented and twisted. Something like this.

[–] ranting_sandfish@mander.xyz 2 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Serious answer - I'm not a medical professional, but I've hurt a finger recently. This is one of the standard positions for x-raying a hand. Splays out all the fingers while leaving them supported for stability.