Thank you, Urs and Simon. I have begun taking a look at the git process, and
will continue to dive into those posts. Very exciting, regardless!
~Conor
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) is like
learning to read or learning to walk.
Best
Urs
~Conor Cook
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___
lilypond
link to
access the files I need on both computers (with the hard file on my laptop,
which stays at home).
Basically, what is the purpose of using Git other than keeping track of
changes?
~Conor Cook
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on
this topic (search for version control), which should summarise the
reasons quite well.
Yours, Simon
~Conor Cook
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(scores and text) is like
learning to read or learning to walk.
Best
Urs
~Conor Cook
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I use Git and Lilypond. I know Git quite well, but haven't been using
Lilypond much lately. I can see from this thread that I'm not using the
two together efficiently, so I'll describe what I should be doing.
1) Keep a tools repository with the include files I depend on, and
really should
Hi list,
Would anyone be able to briefly share with me how they use Git with
Lilypond; i.e. do you create a separate repository for each composition you
are working on, do you make a separate branch for each part while you are
working on it and then merge when it is finished, if you sell your
Op Thu, 12 Feb 2015 20:33:31 +
Craig Dabelstein craig.dabelst...@gmail.com schreef:
Hi list,
Would anyone be able to briefly share with me how they use Git with
Lilypond; i.e. do you create a separate repository for each
composition you are working on, do you make a separate branch for
On Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 02:07:36PM -0800, Tim Walters wrote:
[...]
Different strokes, I guess!
Indeed. :-)
On 2/12/15 1:44 PM, H. S. Teoh wrote:
It's not *that* much easier than `mkdir new_composition; cd
new_composition; git init`. :-)
Then you have to push it to the remote server,
On Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 08:33:31PM +, Craig Dabelstein wrote:
Hi list,
Would anyone be able to briefly share with me how they use Git with
Lilypond; i.e. do you create a separate repository for each
composition you are working on, do you make a separate branch for each
part while you
My approach is almost the opposite. I have everything in one repository,
with each composition in its own folder, because:
--I have files that are common to all compositions. Having separate
copies of these all over the place is exactly what I don't want. If I
change, for example, the script
Hi Craig,
I have a quite primitive git workflow:
Two repos:
1. openlilylib snippets (with some private branches)
2. scores (containing all my scores in different subfolders)
In (1) I have some branches for each additional feature, to stay in sync with
the upstream repository
In (2) I just
On Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 01:29:55PM -0800, Tim Walters wrote:
My approach is almost the opposite. I have everything in one
repository, with each composition in its own folder, because:
--I have files that are common to all compositions. Having separate
copies of these all over the place is
On 2/12/15 1:44 PM, H. S. Teoh wrote:
If it were me, I'd use a dedicated repository for the common stuff, put
it in a specific location, and just point the scripts in each
composition's directory at it.
All well and good until you want to branch it with a composition, set up
a new machine,
Thanks for the advice everyone. I appreciate your experience.
Craig
On Fri Feb 13 2015 at 8:24:28 AM H. S. Teoh hst...@quickfur.ath.cx wrote:
On Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 02:07:36PM -0800, Tim Walters wrote:
[...]
Different strokes, I guess!
Indeed. :-)
On 2/12/15 1:44 PM, H. S. Teoh
I use one repository, a number of shared directories, and then one
subdirectory for each project.
I create a branch off of my master branch whenever I start a project (and
often a number of branches off of that for experiments) and make a lot of
commits, then I rebase and squash all the commits
Hi,
I'm a software engineer by trade and have been using git for software
development for quite some time.
Let me first start saying that there are *many* different possible
workflows, and each user needs to come up with their own workflow that
they're comfortable with.
With respect to
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