### A Note on Saving vs "Committing" When you save an item, a file is created on disk that represents that item. However, the item is not actually committed into the archives until you _build_ the project. Because saving is much faster than building, we recommend that you save frequently and build only when you want to test your project. In case you close your project without having built all your files, Serial Loops will auto-detect the existence of saved but uncommitted files and alert you of this on project load, at which point you can build to commit those items into the archives.
|:---------:|:----:|
| CRC | `8A58F646` |
| MD5 | `6536132EFDDD337AA5069E627591FEE5` |
| SHA-1 | `81D5C6316DBCEF9F4C51984ADCAAE171124EBB08` |
When you save an item, a file is created on disk that represents that item.
However, the item is not actually committed into the archives until you _build_
the project. Because saving is much faster than building, we recommend that you
save frequently and build only when you want to test your project. In case you
close your project without having built all your files, Serial Loops will
auto-detect the existence of saved but uncommitted files and alert you of this
on project load, at which point you can build to commit those items into the
archives.