Fantastic! It works wonderfully.
Thank you kindly,
Mark
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You definitely do not want a commit every time you save your file. Just
commit when you reach a milestone, etc.
Also, have you looked into using a online document hosting service like
GoogleDocs. I presume you need to use advanced editing features that are
available part of Word or some other thic
You definitely do not want a commit every time you save your file. Just
commit when you reach a milestone, etc.
Good deal. I'm still experimenting with that. Some of my projects a single
line, or word, change is a major milestone. But it looks like I'll be
manually committing to git and relyi
On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 9:16 PM, Mark (my words) wrote:
> Git compares lines: I just diff’ed versions of a poem and wondered why it
> appeared I had deleted a block and replaced it with an identical block.
Maybe a whitespace only change was made. You could re-try with
git-diff -w
-Brett.
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make sure you have .gitignore to NOT TRACK you text wrangler backup files
google docs does not support git AFAIK - not sure if git is the most
appropriate tool
for managing written word collection (could really depend on the User)
but it is very accommodating ; the book I recommended used a peom
No worries, my TW backups are in an entirely differnt directory structure
from my writing—that would be a mess.
Git may not be an appropriate tool, I guess that’s what I’m trying to
discover. I go through an unholy number of drafts—it can be a hassle
tracking down that one phrase that didn’t ma