Heck yeah, git is a Swiss army knife for versioning all kinds of things beyond programming repos.
Outside of work, I’ve been using git in local “working” or “sandbox” directories on my personal machines for ages where I do everything. Just have an alias to quickly stage and commit with simple search tags in the commit message, and only move out copies of documents, spreadsheets, 3d printing projects, video and image edits, songs and tabs, etc. after I get them to their “final” point. It’s been a lifesaver for recovering disastrous program crashes that can corrupt files, on more than a few occasions.
Heck yeah, git is a Swiss army knife for versioning all kinds of things beyond programming repos.
Outside of work, I’ve been using git in local “working” or “sandbox” directories on my personal machines for ages where I do everything. Just have an alias to quickly stage and commit with simple search tags in the commit message, and only move out copies of documents, spreadsheets, 3d printing projects, video and image edits, songs and tabs, etc. after I get them to their “final” point. It’s been a lifesaver for recovering disastrous program crashes that can corrupt files, on more than a few occasions.