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This question may seem backwards to all logical reasoning, but I encountered a team member who was working on a side project out of the main tree, and had decided ( rephrased )

I'm the only developer, we don't need version control, that's stupid

Now personally, the idea horrifies me, and I can't for one justify it.

So now my stance is clear, I want some legitimate answers why somebody can excuse themselves from using version control. The default answers will of course be "there is no excuse".

Not what I want to see. If you can't see an excuse, then just don't post. ( Feel free to downmod excuses others post that are illegitimate/bad and give reasoning )

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dropbox for a VERY VERY simple version controlling for a lazy newbie? – zengr Jul 10 '10 at 0:16
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92 Answers

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There are no good reasons not to use version control. Not one.

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If you have ever made a mistake, you need version control. Otherwise, you can do without it. – Rory MacLeod Sep 25 '08 at 13:37
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Having worked on solo projects: I have met the enemy and he is me. – Alan Sep 26 '08 at 2:08
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Lets be pragmatic people. Plenty of code is written and maintained by non-professionals outside of source control (scientists for instance) and it works just fine. Different work environments have different emphasis on software best practices. – Brendan Nov 13 '08 at 17:54
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I don't understand, haven't you read the question !? "Default answer: no excuse! -> not what I want to hear". Sounds clear to me. This is a perfectly valid question for she who seeks to understand her fellow developpers even if they are unexperienced, immature or simply suck. I'll give you that the benefits of source control are blatantly obvious even for 1 and that the decision to use it should be a no brainer. But if you can't think of a single reason why people would be reluctant, even though mistakenly, then perhaps you should move some energy from dogmatism to empathy/listening skills. – Yann Semet Jun 17 '09 at 8:30
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@Galwegian : I'm sorry, I don't mean this to be ad hominem. I agree with you from a technical standpoint as we pretty much all do I think. From a human resources standpoint however, I just hate it when we developpers, as group, tend to forget that programmers are people and therefore, as such, only boundedly rational. There are also other criteria for decision making than purely technical ones. Forgetting that in general, I believe, has huge consequences in terms of productivity and results in bad management. – Yann Semet Jun 17 '09 at 8:38
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I can think of one:

I'm the only developer, we don't need version control, and I'm stupid

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That was funny! LOL Sounded like something Homer Simpson would say. – Hector Sosa Jr Sep 25 '08 at 10:39
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Very Funny. Would Laugh Again. A+++++++++ – Robert Venables Feb 18 '09 at 1:24
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Thanks to everybody that voted up this silly answer for my first 'Great Answer' badge. =) – Sergio Acosta Mar 11 '09 at 7:35
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A delightful mix of laziness and incompetence.

An anecdote I heard one time in regards to version control:

A younger programmer asked an elder about his code and his coding style, and how the older programmer would do certain things. The older programmer said 'Let's take a look at your code', so the younger took out his laptop, opened his editor, and showed him.

The older programmer looked at the code, thought about it for a bit, and then started editing it. He deleted the class internals, leaving only the structure, and then rearranged the structure, saying 'Here's how I would do it to make it more efficient and readable'. After he was done, he saved the file and gave it back to the younger programmer, who was ashen-faced.

'That... My code is gone!' said the younger programmer. 'But you have it in version control somewhere, right?' asked the elder. 'N.... no.' was the reply. 'Well then,' said the older, 'now you've learned two lessons.'

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Don't give your laptop to anyone, ever. – James McMahon Oct 17 '08 at 0:58
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The young programmer deserved losing his code for not using source control. The elder deserved a punch in the face, though. – Sergio Acosta Mar 10 '09 at 1:20
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Where did ctrl-z go? – hasen j Jun 7 '09 at 3:03
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I am missing the punch line: "And the young programmer was enlightened". – Stefano Borini Aug 13 '09 at 12:38
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Excuse for not using source control:

"The only source control system I am allowed to use is Visual Source Safe."

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Best answer !!!! – zaca Sep 25 '08 at 12:02
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As bad as SourceSafe is, its better than nothing. – Paul Batum Sep 25 '08 at 12:12
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Hmm. I can't believe I just defended SourceSafe. Somebody shoot me. – Paul Batum Sep 25 '08 at 12:12
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I'd rather rewrite ten years of code than use Source Safe! – Jrgns Sep 25 '08 at 20:06
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If somebody would force me to use VSS then I'd probably quit that job. On the other hand if they'd offer $1000000 I'd think about it some more. – rslite Oct 7 '08 at 11:40
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The sense of danger gives my programming an edge

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haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa – Sara Chipps Sep 25 '08 at 17:46
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I get enough sense of danger from the procrastination on Stack Overflow causing me to bump deadlines. – CindyH Sep 25 '08 at 22:59
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I always program from atop a slow-moving conveyor belt approaching a spinning circular saw. – j_random_hacker Nov 5 '09 at 11:23
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remember the last time that you got cut on that edge? – CheeseConQueso Dec 15 '09 at 15:49
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you want to leave no evidence :)

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git squash does away with this excuse. – Abizern Dec 11 '08 at 11:51
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Possible 'excuses':-

  1. "My code is buggy, unstructured, and unreadable. It's simply not worth trying to keep"

  2. "Management will understand if my project slips by six month because I accidentally deleted something I shouldn't. They do it all the time."

  3. "If I delete my 5000 line source file by mistake, chances are the total rewrite may be better than the original. Eventually."

Feel free to add your own...

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The kind of person who refuses to use source control is probably completely covered by point 1. – Mark Ransom Feb 6 '09 at 16:05
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Visual SourceSafe ate my dog.

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Not quite sure what this means, but its very funny. – Simon Keep Sep 25 '08 at 10:43
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Don't make your VCS the ONLY copy – BCS Sep 25 '08 at 17:47
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"Are there any good excuses not to use Visual SourceSafe?" is a whole different question, with many many (MANY) good answers! – raimesh Mar 18 '09 at 8:43
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Love it. The implication is that Visual SourceSafe's level of unreliability transcends the usual laws of the software universe -- it can actually reach out and bork things in the external world. It's a whole new kind of unreliability. – j_random_hacker Nov 5 '09 at 11:42
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@SiKeep This is a variation on the old school boy excuse "My dog ate my homework." This comment was bought to you by the Ministry of Excuse Etymology. – Giles Roberts Nov 24 '11 at 10:33
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  • It can give a false sense of security. Using a VCS does not imply that your data is safeguarded against system failures, because you need real backups for that.
  • For small toy projects the cost of learning a VCS may outweigh the benefits.
  • Introducing a VCS at a time when you're trying to meet a deadline introduces a risk of missed deadlines (however small it is).
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No; the cost of not using source control outweighs the cost of using it - unless your source control system is so grotesquely unusable in which case, you need to use a different VCS. – Jonathan Leffler Apr 20 '09 at 4:23
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And the risk of not using a VCS is that you won't meet your deadline because you couldn't revert to a better working version of the code after you screwed up some change because of the pressure of the impending deadline. – Jonathan Leffler Apr 20 '09 at 4:24
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Oh my god. You get voted up for having the first honest attempt at an answer. – Beska Aug 13 '09 at 13:33
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You hate your company and want to see them fail.

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And your own reputation tarnished in the process? No, I think its time to quit.. – Kramii Jul 3 '09 at 10:43
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"For the first 10 years of kernel maintenance, we literally used tarballs and patches, which is a much superior source control management system than CVS is" --Torvalds

If you've got quick/easy/automatic backups, you've already got 95% of what most of us use VC for. Somebody with a local DVCS repository on his HD but no backups is actually in much worse shape.

Using a VCS does have a real cost, and it's usually a small one but not always. Every VCS I've ever used, I've had days where I had to fight with it for hours just to get it to do something that should have been simple.

To those that think "There are no good reasons not to use version control", where does it end? Must every project have 100% unit test code coverage? Must every project have code reviews? Coding standards? A complete functional spec?

There's a whole spectrum of programming projects in the world. Not everybody is writing code for the space shuttle. Sometimes being able to diff my code from 11:00am and 11:30am is simply not that important.

Some are merely managing globally-distributed teams of thousands writing operating system kernels.

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I think you'll find that the Linux kernel has been under source control since 2002. In fact, the aforementioned Mr Torvalds actually wrote his own source control system for it. (Git.) Admittedly it was a different picture ten years ago, when source control was either expensive or CVS, but a lot of the modern ones such as Git, Mercurial or Bazaar are much lower friction. To those that think "Where does it end" -- Must every project have backups? Must every IDE have an undo button? Must every project be saved to disk? The only code that doesn't need source control is throwaway code. – jammycakes May 31 '09 at 16:49
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I'm not sure you can make the argument of "where does it end." In my mind, if you already have a source control system setup, there is little to no cost to use it, and it's a good practice to get into for so many reasons. Unit test code coverage, code reviews, etc are not as intuitively good and are not always appropriate (or at least, have not proven to be as useful as version control). The responses from other individuals on this site should suggest how useful a VCS is. – JasCav Aug 13 '09 at 16:05
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How about...

It's not really my code in the first place. I just copied and pasted it from a web tutorial. If I lose it, I can just find that web site and get it again. Besides, it doesn't work, anyway.

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I suppose the web is your version control in this case. Hell, Google cache is probably more reliable than Vis SourceSafe! ;) – rally25rs Feb 18 '09 at 1:25
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Excuse:

A side project is a prototype/throw-away exercise so to see how a concept or idea works in code. The code won't be kept around after learning from it.

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Key word, excuse. If I had a nickel for every time I could have saved myself several hours by looking at a "throw-away", I would have a lot of nickels. – Guvante Sep 25 '08 at 10:41
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I dont think ANY code is throw away code. Even if you dont use it, its a great learning experience to go back and look at that "throw away" code and see how you can do more with it. – Rob Cooper Sep 25 '08 at 10:55
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Here every code that was written as prototype or proof-of-concept is still running. For years. So I think there's no such thing as throw-away code. – ComSubVie Sep 25 '08 at 11:00
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That's actually not bad. As others have said if I had back all the throw-away code I've disposed of only to learn later on that I needed it. Ah, memories. . . . – Onorio Catenacci Sep 25 '08 at 12:28
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Have a sandbox repo! – BCS Sep 25 '08 at 17:48
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Small, and by small I mean less than a half hour of playing around in a new project, just to try out a method, run a quick test on a service, answer a forum question, etc.

I have literally hundreds of these tiny projects that I've done over the years. Most of them are just a way to try something out in a clean environment, before importing it into a larger (and source controlled) project. Every once in a while I go through the folder of these and delete old ones that I know I dont need anymore. Typically some of these apps last on my hard drive less than a week.

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i agree. this is the one really legitimate case. I also have dozens of test projects full of junk code I was just experimenting with. Anything that turns into something gets transplanted to a real project and put in source control. The very idea of all my ramblings being archived gives me a headache. – LoveMeSomeCode Oct 1 '09 at 14:54
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Fully agree. My StackOverflow answer code is not going in to version control. Unless you consider SO version control of course. – extraneon Mar 8 '10 at 16:12
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"I am the 'Pantless Prima Donna'! I need none of your mortal tools! I am infallible. Version control is only for people who expect to get it wrong the first time!" :-P

Dilbert

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Everybody is giving some variation of "there is no excuse" or "well maybe if you're stupid!", but this seems entirely inconsistent with what I see other people actually do.

For example, how many people here have all your email, digital photos, web browser bookmarks, and system configuration in a version control repository? I know some people do (hi Joey!), but most people I know, even most programmers, don't.

The comeback is probably going to be "well, I have backups, and I don't need to track changes to email, or branch my photos, or ...". Great! So let's try to extrapolate from that to when a reasonable person might think that version control is unnecessary:

  • a bunch of small, independent pieces of data
  • that are inherently temporal, and are rarely edited in-place, in the sense that changes consist primarily of adding new data
  • which might be large binary files, a weakness of VCSs
  • which might live in a program-specific format (like an SQLite db), for which it would take an extra step (or twelve) to get the data in a format that would actually be useful to track in your VCS
  • which are already backed up

That seems like a good starting point.

Of course, I want to track everything in VCS, but due to the above issues, it would take more effort than it's worth. I wish programs I used would store data in formats that made it easy to use a VCS, and I wish VCSs were better about tracking data which isn't just "all text files below a certain folder". (Text files were something Unix got right! Sadly we've got some kind of AT&T-MIT-Microsoft-Xerox hybrid architecture going on, which doesn't let the best of any philosophy really shine.) That's just not the world we live in, for better or worse.

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I would suggest that a VCS system is required whenever files must be kept in sync, rather than merely backed up, and especially if it can be important to find out when and why a change was made. – Arafangion Dec 19 '10 at 4:41
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"In my free time, I like bondage, having hot wax pour in my mouth, and sticking forks in my eyes. I'd like to bring some of my hobbies into work, but as the work council objects, I had to find an alternative"

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I found that when everyone wore gimp suits at work it was hard to aportion blame and punishment accordingly. But then I realised that they were all going to get punished severely so did it really matter who was at fault in the first place? – graham.reeds Aug 18 '09 at 14:50
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My Dog Ate My Head?

That's about all I got? Since I told myself off for not using SCC at home (and losing all my previous code) I have NEVER looked back. I use it all the time, I check in all the time.

Why the hell would you not like to be able to:

  • Simplify backup of all your code?
  • Be able to mess with it more, knowing you can restore?
  • Realise that you completely borked some code and didn't notice and compare versions to see how you borked it?

All I got is "my dog ate my head".

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I can't find a version control system which works with punch cards.

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I think it's called a shoebox! – mbmcavoy Jul 10 '10 at 0:25
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No excuses. Even a single developer will benefit from having his/her code under version control.

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You don't want to know why you made a certain change 3 weeks ago because theres NO way you could ever want to be able to simply check the change log, and you love pain and misery and prefer to do things the old-school way, with comments and pages of commented code.

You also like modifying code and having bugs you fixed earlier come back, and you like not knowing why.

You like the sense of "mystery" and "excitement" it adds to your life.

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There are two main parts of version control.

  1. Having backups of old versions of 'files'
  2. Being able to diff / merge / etc on various versions

For part 1 there is no excuse I can think of. Part 2 however, there are situations you can argue against it since the way in which you're coding renders it useless.

I for example spend four weeks on a project where 'code' was stored in a binary format such that you couldn't diff or merge or do any of that good stuff.

I also spend a much larger amount of time (shudder, I don't like to think about it) 'coding' on a project which was essentially configuration into a web application which pushed stuff into a DB we didn't control. No source control possible there either. Or backups of old files.

Oh, how fun that was..

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ClearCase -- this is a very good reason not to use source control ... (but I used the demo version of Perforce instead :-) )

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...maybe if they're holding a gun to your Dog's head?

But, then I think you have bigger problems.

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"I'm the only developer, we don't need version control, that's stupid"

That's putting your job on the line, period. Suppose his computer DOES crash, all his work is gone, so in effect, this person hasn't worked at all in the last few days, weeks, months (years???). Is slacking off like this tolerated in your company? I hope not.

Not using Source Control is like having this code in the initialization routine of the application you're developing:

if (Random(1234567) == 0)
{
 DeleteSourceCode();
}

Would you bet on that never to happen?

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Yeah, but backing up the SVN server regularly is a heck of a lot easier than backing up developers' laptops regularly. – Adam Jaskiewicz Nov 13 '08 at 18:43
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You may not want version tracking in a highly classified, highly paranoid environment, where who/when/why and what-came-before, are exactly what you want to expunge.

(I have never actually encountered this, and I have worked on classified projects.)

Think CIA black op, or presidential campaign.

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so you create the repo inside a hidden encrypted volume that exists on a second hard disk in the same machine. You version track until the work is done. then dump everything but the final version. – kdmurray May 11 '09 at 3:11
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I see only developer's personal gain of you being tied to him as he may be the only one to remember changes within versions.. if i got the question right ^^

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Some might think that it's job security. I disagree, but I've seen that line of thinking manifested that way.

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It's just an "Hello World!" application. We don't need version control for that!

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I wonder how many revisions GNU's /bin/true program has. Let alone a "Hello World!" application. – Arafangion May 21 '10 at 3:54
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Your VCS system is a hassle to use. Too much trouble for this small project

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