Revision-Tracked Artifact
(Redirected from version-controlled artifact)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
A Revision-Tracked Artifact is a digital artifact that maintains change history (recording modifications, additions, and deletions over time).
- AKA: Version-Controlled Object, Change-Tracked Item, Revisioned Artifact.
- Context:
- It can typically preserve Historical States through sequential versioning.
- It can typically attribute Change Authorship through contributor identification.
- It can typically document Modification Timestamps through chronological recording.
- It can typically support Version Comparison through differential analysis.
- It can typically enable State Rollback through historical state restoration.
- ...
- It can often include Change Annotations for modification rationale.
- It can often contain Branch Indicators for parallel development paths.
- It can often provide Merge Markers for branch reconciliation.
- It can often maintain Change Log Entries for modification documentation.
- It can often incorporate Access Control Indicators for change permissions.
- ...
- It can range from being a Linear Version History Artifact to being a Branched Version History Artifact, depending on its history structure.
- It can range from being a Simple Change-Tracked Artifact to being a Complex Revision Management Artifact, depending on its tracking sophistication.
- It can range from being a Single-User Revision Artifact to being a Multi-Contributor Collaborative Artifact, depending on its authorship model.
- It can range from being a File-Level Revision Artifact to being a Component-Level Revision Artifact, depending on its granularity.
- It can range from being a Manual Version Artifact to being an Automated Revision Artifact, depending on its version creation method.
- ...
- It can have Version Identifiers for state reference.
- It can have Differential Markup for change visualization.
- It can have Conflict Indicators for competing change representation.
- It can have Revision Timeline for history visualization.
- It can have Approval Status Markers for change validation.
- ...
- Examples:
- Document Artifacts, such as:
- Version-Controlled Text Documents, such as:
- Revision-Tracked Structured Documents, such as:
- Change-Tracked Media Documents, such as:
- Digital Assets, such as:
- Version-Controlled Code Artifacts, such as:
- Revision-Tracked Design Artifacts, such as:
- Version-Controlled Data Artifacts, such as:
- ...
- Document Artifacts, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Unversioned Artifact, which lacks change tracking mechanisms.
- Artifact Snapshot, which represents a single point-in-time state without history.
- Audit Record, which documents actions performed rather than content changes.
- Backup Copy, which preserves complete state without differential information.
- Final Document, which represents only the current state without previous versions.
- See: Digital Artifact, Versioned Content, Change Record, Revision History, Collaborative Document, Content Evolution, Baseline Artifact.