Now that's a different story and a good source. And at the very beginning of it:
I travel all over the place teaching Git to people and nearly every class and workshop I've done recently has asked me what I think about git-flow. I always answer that I think that it's great - it has taken a system (Git) that has a million possible workflows and documented a well tested, flexible workflow that works for lots of developers in a fairly straightforward manner. It has become something of a standard so that developers can move between projects or companies and be familiar with this standardized workflow.
And:
So, why don't we use git-flow at GitHub? Well, the main issue is that we deploy all the time.
Before newbies will have to resolve issues with git-flow I expect, they will have enough experience.
It is all about to see a whole process before you can do something with it.
So, for beginners case, you have not convinced me, sorry.
Hello! I'm an author of original article. Thanks for your comment.
As I said I've seen many theories. You provided interesting link but it also only theory:
But I want to give some basic launch pad for newbies. Hope after this they will be able to build their own workflow.
That's a basic launchpad for newbies: guides.github.com/introduction/flow/
Newbies in my context are new IT companies or who thinks about organizing a teamwork on their project first time.
Your link for people, who don't even know about git.
What a sad state of affairs. More fancy looking doc should be praised.
githubflow.github.io/ here is a more serious looking doc. Same thing though but maybe that will convince you or whoever read that far in the comments.
Now that's a different story and a good source. And at the very beginning of it:
And:
Before newbies will have to resolve issues with git-flow I expect, they will have enough experience.
It is all about to see a whole process before you can do something with it.
So, for beginners case, you have not convinced me, sorry.
Oh gosh don't be sorry please, no harm.
We haven't convince each other, it's all fine.