The author lists that as a separate benefit, though.
My interpretation is that jj makes certain useful operations convenient to use that would be so complex in git as to be completely impractical. Something like jj undo would be a simple example: jj users can do it, and git users can’t, even though it’s logically possible in both systems.
My interpretation is that jj makes certain useful operations convenient to use that would be so complex in git as to be completely impractical. Something like jj undo would be a simple example: jj users can do it, and git users can’t, even though it’s logically possible in both systems.