Yeah. That’s discussed in more detail in the code change that resulted from the issue report.
It’s a ballsy move by the VSCode team to not only include git clean but to keep it after numerous issue reports.
As others discussed in that thread, git clean has no business being offered in a graphical menu where a git novice may find it.
That said, I do think the expanded warning mesage they added addresses the issue by calling out that whatever git may think, the user is about to lose some files.
“Changes” are not the same thing as “files”.
I’d expect that files that are not in version control would not be touched.
Yeah. That’s discussed in more detail in the code change that resulted from the issue report.
It’s a ballsy move by the VSCode team to not only include
git clean
but to keep it after numerous issue reports.As others discussed in that thread,
git clean
has no business being offered in a graphical menu where a git novice may find it.That said, I do think the expanded warning mesage they added addresses the issue by calling out that whatever
git
may think, the user is about to lose some files.“Changes” encompass more than you think. Creating / Deleting files are also changes, not just edits to a file.
It can also be all of them at the same time, which is why VSCode uses “Changes” instead of “Files”.
And the terminology is misleading, resulting in problems. shrug.
I find it difficult to lay the blame with VSCode when the terminology belongs to git, which (even 7 years ago) was an industry standard technology.
People using tools they don’t understand and plowing ahead through scary warnings will always encounter problems.
Wasn’t the issue that it deleted a bunch of preexisting untracked files? So old untracked files.