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Home/ Questions/Q 362557
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T13:15:30+00:00 2026-05-12T13:15:30+00:00

Could anyone give me some idea to why git developers made a design decision

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Could anyone give me some idea to why git developers made a design decision to store contents of files (blobs), so when the content changes a new blob needs to be created?

I believe subversion stores revisions rather than contents, so when the content changes, it simply keeps track of the differences between the two. Couldn’t git have done it like this as well? What’s the benefit of storing contents rather than revisions?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T13:15:30+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 1:15 pm

    I couldn’t find the answer with a quick google, but I believe it boils down to a simple “it doesn’t matter ’cause disk space is cheap”.

    Storing revisions within a source code management tool is tricky. If you only ever store the difference between the previous revision and the current, you end up with two problems:

    1. Returning the latest revision (the common case) requires the most work, as the code needs to assemble that revision by combining every revision together.
    2. Any error (say, a disk fault) to one revision corrupts access to every later revision.

    I believe that most modern VCS actually store the latest revision (for performance reasons) and differences, if used, are used to go back in time, not forwards.

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