I'm kinda planning on teaching my team how to use interactive rebases to clean the history before a merge request.
The first thing they'll learn is to make a temporary second branch so they can just toss their borked one if they screw up. I'm not going to deal with their git issues for them.
I disagree. I don't wanna deal with my coworkers work, so I'm teaching them to deal with it themselves. Not necessarily in the best way for them to do it, but in an easy way to teach and an easy way to get right
Never understood why this is such a trope. There's very little you can't recover in git (basically, only changes you never committed in the first place).
Not sure if serious or not, but yeah I use interactive rebases every day, many times a day (it's nice for keeping a clean, logical history of atomic changes).
It's very simple to recover if you accidentally do something you don't intend (git rebase --abort if the rebase is still active, git reflog to find the commit before the rebase if it's finished).