On 15/12/2010, at 1:31 PM, Erick Tryzelaar wrote:

> 
> git flow is just a convenience wrapper around other git commands.

I know.

>> and learn even more things to contribute: getting rid of interscript
>> was supposed to make it easier.
> 
> Not necessarily. First off, It's pretty simple for someone to mail us
> a patch and for us to apply it without needing to understand our
> repository workflow.

Perhaps, though I for one have no idea how to do that :)

At this stage, we're really not interested in patches: we need developers.
People to rewite major bits of code, develop whole libraries, etc.

Particularly we need a set (read: a lot more than one) of programmers
to handle Windows stuff..

> Second, github also has nice support for handling
> pull requests:
> 
> http://help.github.com/pull-requests/

Sure .. and for Windows users?
> 
>> I already have enough trouble doing really simple things, like replacing
>> a broken file (no, git fetch file does not work):
> 
> Do you mean "git checkout file"?

Do I? I wouldn't know. I tried "fetch". Seems obvious, I'm not trying to 
checkout
a file, I'm trying to re-fetch one :)

> 
> Oh, and about things backed up onto github. github doesn't get any
> changes until you do a "git push". Until you do that all your changes
> are saved in your local git repository.

I know, the question is: what happens if I make a new "feature" branch/


--
john skaller
skal...@users.sourceforge.net





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