As I'm clearly not well-versed in the goings-on of GitHub, I've 'forked' a response, but am not sure it worked correctly.
I've zipped up and sent updates to Tom. If anyone could point me in the direction of a good GitHub tutorial (for contributing to projects such as these - the 'creating an account' part I think I have down), I'd appreciate it. Thanks, Mark On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 1:43 PM, Tom Keays <tomke...@gmail.com> wrote: > Let's have mine be the canonical version for now. It will be too confusing > to have two versions that don't have an explicit fork relationship. > > https://github.com/tomkeays/issue-manager > > Tom > > On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 1:56 PM, Chad Nelson <chadbnel...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Beat me by one minute Tom! >> >> And here it is in code4lib github >> >> https://github.com/code4lib/IssueManager >> >> >> On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 1:47 PM, Tom Keays <tomke...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> > On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 1:01 PM, Shaun Ellis <sha...@princeton.edu> >> wrote: >> > >> > > You can upload it to your account and then someone with admin rights to >> > > Code4Lib can fork it if they think our Code4Lib Journal custom code >> > should >> > > be a repo there. Doesn't really matter if they do actually. I think >> for >> > > debugging, it's best to point folks to the actual code the journal is >> > > running, which was forked from the official one on the Codex, right? >> > >> > >> > It was written for the Journal and originally kept in a Google Code repo >> > (this is before Github became the de facto). After the author left the >> > journal, he did a couple of updates which he uploaded to the WP Codex, >> but >> > nothing for a few years. >> > >> > Anyway, here it is: >> > >> > https://github.com/tomkeays/issue-manager >> > >>