Just a clarification:
Playground is saving after each change, not only after a Go. To some
extent, it is some sort of duplication with the DoIt actions, but the
Playground saves the entire code, not just the executed one.

It saves the contents in a play-cache folder by default, but you can
configure it to be in a central folder shared by multiple images.

The idea is exactly to try to find a mechanism that is transparent and
let's you play without worrying about save/load. We still have to refine
the mechanism a bit though.

Please also note that GTSpotter searches through past Playground pages
which means that discovery is now easier than before.

Cheers,
Doru

On Tue, Dec 16, 2014 at 1:17 PM, Thierry Goubier <thierry.goub...@gmail.com>
wrote:
>
>
>
> 2014-12-16 13:00 GMT+01:00 Sven Van Caekenberghe <s...@stfx.eu>:
>>
>>
>> > On 16 Dec 2014, at 12:54, Thierry Goubier <thierry.goub...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > 2014-12-16 12:44 GMT+01:00 Sven Van Caekenberghe <s...@stfx.eu>:
>> >
>> >
>> > ===
>> >
>> > We need something very low friction, like automatic saving/remembering.
>> >
>> >
>> > Why not searching among the doit(s) stored in the changes?
>> >
>> > Thierry
>>
>> Yes, that combined with Workspace's 'Previous contents' and the new
>> automatic saving of Playground after Go.
>>
>
> Isn't the Playground saving after go a duplication of the Changes
> recording of the associated doit?
>
>
>>
>> It just needs to become a really safe and dependable - so that you just
>> know you can safely close a workspace/playground with an important script
>> and always can get it back.
>>
>
> I rebuilt my images regularly, so it could be nice to have that linked to
> a repository. And yes, simple and dependable. Like in: there is no need to
> explain how it works... Or that the how is obvious.
>
> Saving states of the workspaces / playground in a kind of log and doits as
> actions on those? Visible in searches? Stored in the package cache? Robust
> to multiple images use on it?
>
> Thierry
>


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