Software Is Made Between Commits

(zed.dev)

80 points | by jeremy_k 2 hours ago ago

45 comments

  • tomjakubowski 31 minutes ago ago

    I really don't like this. The code I write between commits is my thinking. I think by writing some code out, deleting it, writing again. The code I write that's shipped in commits is written for others to understand, and is a product of that writing for thinking process.

    I don't want my thoughts to be serialized, version controlled and publicly accessible.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s44222-025-00323-4

    • fridder 20 minutes ago ago

      The collaboration part I’m skeptical of but I get it, as it sounds like a feature made for business consumers

    • gmueckl 9 minutes ago ago

      Don't be afraid to show your thoughts when asked to. The best developers are those that can express their thoughts clearly at any stage throughout their process. This is one of the skills that shows to me the level of experience a developer has.

    • jcgrillo 8 minutes ago ago

      Fully agree, very icky surveillance vibes. In particular:

      > DeltaDB breaks your work into a stream of fine-grained deltas. Where Git captures a snapshot at each commit, DeltaDB captures every operation in between and gives each one a stable identity.

      I was curious about giving Zed a try, now that it has an emacs keymap. Not anymore. This is such a horribly invasive feature, I absolutely do not want my colleagues reviewing every single intermediate edit, down to the keystroke, that went into the commits I publish for review.

      Before I put a PR up for review, I'll sometimes edit my commit history a little bit in magit to make it more linear and digestible--maybe update descriptions, squash some adjacent commits together, etc. This just throws that whole aspect of the job out the window and says "hey, colleague, hoover up this firehose of deltas and enjoy it".

      And what the hell does this even mean?

      > What we're really after is simple: the conversation with the agent becomes the only conversation you need to have.

      Lmao. No. Wrong.

    • 0xb0565e486 23 minutes ago ago

      Aren't you paid to think?

      • NewJazz 12 minutes ago ago

        A woodworker is paid to work with wood. But the finished product is the worked wood, not a detailed summary of how the wood was worked with.

      • bauldursdev 19 minutes ago ago

        No I'm paid to write code.

        • malyk 10 minutes ago ago

          No, you are paid to provide solutions for your customers.

        • NewJazz 12 minutes ago ago

          Does that... Not imply thinking avout what you are writing???

        • muadddib 8 minutes ago ago

          and you can do that without thinking?

  • mplanchard 29 minutes ago ago

    There are so many early-stage startups also competing in this space right now. I’ve been on the interview circuit the past few weeks and talked to at least two. It’s going to be stiff competition for any of these tools to get well-established enough to be successful at a large scale.

    I can’t help but feel like it is all enabling a level of developer surveillance with which I am deeply uncomfortable, though.

  • prodigycorp 42 minutes ago ago

    I have an uneasy feeling in my stomach because i know anthropic or openai acquiring zed is inevitable. They have too many good ideas and their software is too good.

    • clickety_clack 25 minutes ago ago

      Ya, their coding harness is way better than Claude code, but because it’s directly using the clause api it’s way more expensive. Rolling it into the family would make it product-class-defining.

    • darepublic 33 minutes ago ago

      They drove up to my house with a dump truck full of money... Im not made of stone!

    • elevation 30 minutes ago ago

      > I have an uneasy feeling in my stomach because i know anthropic or openai acquiring zed is inevitable. They have too many good ideas and their software is too good.

      Why stop at zed? The trillion dollar investment AI companies have amassed was nominally for datacenters, but as those costs rise and completion timelines extend past the typical business planning horizon, it becomes more efficient to put the money to work elsewhere. You can buy whatever you want with a trillion dollars.

    • whazor 30 minutes ago ago

      Seems like where anthropic or openai want to go, there are no editors anymore.

      I personally want better read-only code tools, or maybe the return of UML?

      • prodigycorp 29 minutes ago ago

        I think it's the other way around. OpenAI is definitely recreating the IDE from scratch with codex app.

  • lijok 3 minutes ago ago

    I swear a lot in my chats with Claude..

  • these 15 minutes ago ago

    This seems like a great way to facilitate data gathering for improving LLMs coding performance.

    If previously you needed to take action 1, 2, 3 to go from state A to B, all you saw was the change from A, B. Now you see intermediates 1, 2, 3 and can train the models to skip straight to B with the added context of the intermediate states.

  • OtherShrezzing 12 minutes ago ago

    I don’t see the value proposition here. I’ve seen roughly this feature proposed by multiple companies, and absolutely none of the have given a convincing reason for the technology to exist.

  • Xotic007 15 minutes ago ago

    A commit is useful because you cleaned it up first. The messing around in between is where you try things and delete the dead ends and most of it is meant to be thrown away. Saving every change and every agent message keeps all that junk around instead.

  • pjm331 an hour ago ago

    so i think the thing that everyone building these git alternatives is missing is a multi-repo story - unless the expectation is that everyone is going to start operating out of monorepos

    i've settled on all of this context attached to issues in a project management system and referenced from commits

    it works just fine - its not like your agent cannot read your issue tracker

    • jackxlau 19 minutes ago ago

      I came across the conclusion here since a change sometimes spans several repos, per-repo history optimizes the wrong target.

    • QuercusMax 39 minutes ago ago

      I've built some skills to help work with multiple repos, but it's really annoying how e.g. repo-specific .claude/ configs are only read when you start the agent in the repo folder. There's a ton of low hanging fruit to improve dev experience.

  • ivanjermakov 17 minutes ago ago

    Just a stream of thoughts: if git commits were a list of sequential primitive changes instead of diff snapshots, conflict resolution would be trivial in most cases.

    Not without cons of course: commit byte size, public WIP work and leaked secrets/unwanted edits.

  • localhoster an hour ago ago

    Sad to see zed going the same route everybody is screaming them not to. Altough, I never expected otherwise.

    • dkdbejwi383 31 minutes ago ago

      What route is that, and why is everyone screaming at them, for someone out of the loop?

  • fridder 24 minutes ago ago

    Well shoot, they beat me to the punch. I’d been circling around something like this, just not collaborative and obviously more thought out than my random experiments. Minus the collab portions I’m interested to see how it compares to jujutsu

  • thesurlydev an hour ago ago

    I'm glad to see this feature and looking forward to see how it evolves.

    Many of the product decisions that Zed's made caused me to switch to Zed for my daily driver IDE (previously JetBrains). The recent AI agent threads and improvements around diffs really solidified the move.

    • b33j0r 36 minutes ago ago

      JetBrains’ AI offering peaked last year when Junie was briefly better than Codex. Now it’s a wash.

      Honestly all of this drives me back towards nvim or notepad sometimes.

      I have had a jetbrains subscription since pycharm came out, and the killer feature was always the visual debugger. Seems nearly quaint now.

      What specific things do you like about zed?

  • timuthang 2 hours ago ago

    Music is the silence between notes

  • ukprogrammer 10 minutes ago ago

    With LLMs now being responsible for the physical typing of code and mundane plumbing tasks, this is a wise direction to go into

    Our human ability is not defined by our _absolute_ output, but, by the quality of the _delta_ applied to an engineering artefact

    Great engineers obsess over every keystroke

    With LLMs, a much smaller number of keystrokes can create a much larger and more positively impactful delta

    Every delta to the codebase can tell us some informational property about the behaviour of the system and storing that information WILL prove to be useful in the future

  • bronlund 30 minutes ago ago

    Just what we need, a new kind of version control %]

  • csours 24 minutes ago ago

    The work product is not the work.

  • hyperhello an hour ago ago

    I hate software tools now. I really do. A hammer would never ask you to think about it constantly. If you think about your hammer it’s because something is wrong with it.

    • ChrisMarshallNY an hour ago ago

      It's not just tools. Pretty much all software is like that.

      The problem is, is that it works, if you assume "working" means the software sellers get wealthy.

      There's a reason that most waitstaff wear black. They should blend into the background, and not be what the folks at the table are talking about. In rare instances, restaurants exist, where the waitstaff is the service.

      In software, though, you're being served by a waiter wearing a clown suit, screaming slogans at you, and serving you lukewarm, pre-chewed goo.

      • hyperhello an hour ago ago

        Ah, McDonald’s isn’t that bad.

      • skydhash 32 minutes ago ago

        I use OpenBSD as a daily driver (but could use Alpine or VoidLinux too) and my setup is pretty much silent. No notifications, no rainbows of colors, no glitz. Let’s take mail. I use a combination of mutt hto directly connect via imap) and fdm/mu4e (to have them locally). I”m not interested in having counters or notifications for any of those.

        The “calm technology” book has an handful of advices, but one of the best example is the xbiff program. It switches picture when you have new mail on your local spool.

    • darepublic 31 minutes ago ago

      From a Casey m podcast I think of agentic driven software dev as code extrusion. I guide and massage the steady output of content

  • skydhash 23 minutes ago ago

    > Before agents, it was easier to believe that the ceremony of trading comments on snapshots was an effective way to collaborate on software,

    I’m highly skeptical of this claim. For any complicated feature, there’s always a design doc (or an RFC, or a wireframe) and that’s what people used for discussion. Discussion in a PR are mostly about whether to accept the code, reject the feature, or provide feedback about alternate implementations. It’s not for pair programming or directing design.

    Collaborating together in a research lab (brainstorm session) is not the same as asking feedback for a journal article (PR). What is described in the article is pair programming with extra steps.

  • axegon_ an hour ago ago

    I'll probably get more hate for saying this but fine: I use Zed 50% of the time (the other 50% dedicated to vim) for two reasons:

    1. It is fast and snappy. Nothing comes even close besides vim (and I don't mind going full time to it if I have to)

    2. The ability to completely shut off and block any slop machine features from interfering with my workflow or leak code back to sloppenai, sloppus or any other self-installed-worst-security-practice-backdoor garbage.

    Having said that, I hope they don't remove that ability in the future and enforce the "slop is so good man, you should try it" philosophy.

    • dematz an hour ago ago

      there is a fork of zed against ai: https://gram-editor.com/

      I am happy about even though I've never tried gram, because if zed goes to shit there will be an alternative, which hopefully pressures zed to stay sane

      • axegon_ 35 minutes ago ago

        Oh, that's a breath of fresh air. And they are on codeberg. Nice! Thank you!

        Edit: After further inspection, I think I'm jumping ship before it's too late. And I'll look, see if there's a way to lend a hand or two when I have time!

      • bigstrat2003 10 minutes ago ago

        Thank you for that link! Looks like it fixes all of my annoyances with Zed; I'll have to try it out.

  • slopinthebag an hour ago ago

    I really like Zed. It's customisable enough for me to make it look how I want, it's faster than every other editor I've tried (scrolling is silk, zero lag anywhere), it has enough features that I don't need an IDE (debugger, refactoring tools), and it generally gets out of my way.

    I also like the AI tools, the inline assistant is good and the agent is also pretty nice and well integrated into the editor without it being the focus point. I'm not against using AI but I certainly don't use it as much as a lot of people do.

    That being said, I really dislike this recent push towards becoming more like a cursor wannabe. They have a new (for now) opt-in default layout that almost hides the editor panel in favour of the agent threads and agent panels. And now this. I don't want to switch editors, but if they keep pushing a different workflow from what I use it might send me back to Jetbrains...