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418 points

TBF, they could probably make the “releases” page more prominent rather than having it buried in all the “code” stuff.

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291 points

GitHub has bad UX for people who just wanna download and use the programs

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145 points

I’d agree, but the caveat is that github is primarily about an interface for source control and collaboration between developers for projects. The release page is really just an also-ran in terms of importance.

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71 points
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Imo they aren’t even trying, because it’s not that hard to make it better. Doesn’t even have to be a compromise. Most people just need a visible download button for the programs, that’s all.

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91 points

Excel has a bad UX for people who want to use it to make art

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40 points
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Do most people who use Excel also make art with it? Because sometimes devs also just download exe files on GitHub :D

They don’t just always copy code from there.

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2 points

But if you want to put a some text and pictures in very specific locations and never worry about them suddenly jumping into random places, Excel is actually better than Word. That’s why people tend to use Excel for all sorts of weird purposes like that. Unlike with Word, things actually stay where you put them.

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53 points

not only the ux, some devs make it absurdly confusing to find a binary.

I don’t want to throw anyone under the bus, but there’s this one niche app.

their github releases at one point were YEARS out of date, they only linked to the current version in seemingly random issue reports’ comments. And the current versions were some daily build artefacts you could find in a navigation tree many clicks deep in some unrelated website. And you’d better be savvy enough to download a successfully built artefact too. And even then the downloaded .zip contained all kinds of fluff unnescessary for using the app.

The app worked fine, sure, but actually obtaining it was fairly tricky, tbh.

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11 points

These build artefacts probably weren’t meant for end users, that’s why they contained the “unnecessary fluff”.

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28 points

GitHub has bad UX for a lot of things

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29 points

The Github UX is amazing if you ever had to use gitlab or bitbucket

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21 points

That’s not really what it’s designed for though

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19 points

It doesn’t have to be a compromise imo. Most people just need a visible download button on the front pages. Wouldn’t hurt devs at all. I mean, even devs sometimes struggle with this lol.

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19 points

I’ve bounced off GitHub more than once trying to figure out how to download the .exe file that I assumed must be somewhere. Honestly I still don’t understand the interface and I’ve submitted bug reports for Jeroba on there. I might have even used GitHub for a project once? Every time I look at it it’s overwhelming and confusing and none of it is self-explanatory. But, that’s fairly true for a lot of stuff in programming.

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20 points
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If there is an exe, it’s under the releases link. On desktop it’s on the right sidebar below “About”. On mobile it’s at the bottom after the readme blurb.

It’s not obvious because the code is the main focus and GitHub would much rather people host their releases somewhere else.

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18 points

I swear they move the link to release page every few months.

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0 points

They purposely hide it, because they don’t wanna tend to normies

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14 points

I fixed it for them

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4 points
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What about up by the name of the repo? Your suggestion still looks almost reasonable, I like it!

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39 points

Worst part is that this used to be a separate tab in the repo navigation. I still cannot conceive of a reason why they would move it from there to some random heading in the middle of the screen, except maybe so they can sell more GitHub trainings.

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4 points

I think you’re on to something haha

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31 points

I’ve been using github for what, 10 years now? And I had no idea there even was a releases page.

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19 points

A lot of projects don’t use it or forget to update it for multiple versions so you probably aren’t missing much.

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14 points
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If you use it as a developer you don’t care about the releases page. You want to see the code and for latest version you just need the git tags. But I’ve also used it for stuff I just needed to run on my machine as an end-user. And for those you turn to the Releases page. That’s where pre-built binaries go.

But it also depends on the target audience. Some projects, even if meant more as software to run than code to import, still target mainly developers or tech users in general and will not have more than just instructions on how to build them. Others, say a Minecraft launcher, or some console emulator, will target a wider audience and provide a good Releases page with binaries for multiple platforms.

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23 points

This is really bad on mobile too. I usually flip to desktop mode to get to releases page quickly.

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12 points

TRUE. the first time I used GitHub, the releases tab being all the way at the bottom in the mobile view confused me for a good while

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9 points

I agree. Whenever I link someone I try to make sure to link directly to the release page.

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6 points

Honestly, releases and the readme could be the first page on their own, you can push the code to another tab as long as the clone button is there. There’s at most a 5% chance I’m just gonna raw dog the code straight from the browser anyways.

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5 points

After downloading code from GitHub for years I can still take over a minute finding the file I want to download at times. Now that’s not long, but it’s why I’m there 90% of the time.

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3 points

If there isnt a link in the readme.md I could be lost for days.

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2 points

On mobile, they hide the code by default. Though the releases are still hidden underneath the readme.

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