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Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Archive for March 26th, 2024

Nederland als kennisland – Boodschappentas met bompakketten op de achterbank. Alles in de waagschaal voor bergen contant geld: Alkmaar is kweekvijver van plofkrakers | Leidsch Dagblad en Noordhollands Dagblad

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/03/26

Nederland als kennisland zowel aan de kant van openbaar ministerie als plofkrakers:

Politiebaas trots op ontmaskering Noord-Hollandse plofkrakersbende. ’Ze waanden zich veilig, waren verrast door hun arrestatie’

Via [Wayback/Archive] FrankSmilda on X: “Achtergrondartikel over plofkraaknetwerk: -routeplanners -verkenners -autodieven -chauffeurs -wapenhandelaren -plofkraker leidschdagblad.nl/cnt/dmf20240223_55252849 #plofkraak “ (een enorme draad met sinds 2019 tientallen berichten over plofkraken):

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Posted in Knowledge Worker, Power User | Leave a Comment »

For vscode: git-rename – Visual Studio Marketplace

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/03/26

In vscode, I have installed [Wayback/Archive] git-rename – Visual Studio Marketplace (with source code at [Wayback/Archive] adam8810/vscode-git-rename: Move or rename a file, a directory, or a symlink using git-mv).

Many people assume that git does recognise rename (or mv) operations by itself. Often it does, but it fails, and when it fails it usually is in a complex situation where it is easy to overlook it did not recognise the rename.

Failing complex situations I have encountered in the past (combined they get worse):

  • rename across several directories
  • first edit, then rename
  • first rename, then edit

So it is better to proactively perform an IDE-assisted git mv operation that informs git of the rename.

Many IDE environments support a built-in rename that keeps git mv in the loop, but Visual Studio Code does not, hence the need for this extension.

It means I agree with the question, disagree with the answer, and agree with the comment in [Wayback/Archive] VS Code ‘git mv’ to preserve file history? – Stack Overflow:

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Posted in .NET, Development, DVCS - Distributed Version Control, git, Software Development, Source Code Management, vscode Visual Studio Code | Leave a Comment »