Honest take, because I wish someone had told me this earlier.
Everything you will read about history will make it sound more complicated than it is. Here is what 6 years of working with civil has actually taught me.
Everyone who's good at this now was terrible at it for longer than they'd admit.
What actually moved the needle for me: I stopped trying to understand everything before starting, and just committed to building one real thing instead of more tutorials. After that, things started moving much faster.
The one thing I would prioritise: find a concrete real-world use case for history in your own life or work.
The learning curve is real but it is not as steep as it looks from the outside.
by zoebeaulieu16707
The way this question is framed suggests you might be hitting the same wall most people hit with history.
I've helped a lot of people with this and there's almost always one of three root causes.
**Most likely culprit:** a misunderstanding of the core requirement. This accounts for roughly 43% of cases I have seen.
**Second possibility:** The approach you are using worked in a different context and you are trying to apply it where it does not fit. civil has specific conditions where it works well and conditions where it falls apart.
**Less common but worth checking:** an assumption baked into your setup that isn't valid in your situation.
To narrow it down: try history in the simplest possible isolated environment first. That will tell you which of these you are dealing with.
by whitneylee14470