On 2016-07-25 16:25, Ed Sanders wrote:
Will it show multiple children (split trees?)
Yes, unless something changed from how the "new change screen" option
behaved on 2.8. But it'll just shove all the ancestors and all the
descendants into a single list.
--
Bartosz Dziewoński
Where do I find links to the parent commit and child commit(s)? All I can
see currently is a link to the parent's diffusion commit(?!).
As someone who often commits a stack of 5+ dependent commits, these are
very useful to my workflow (or anyone reviewing my code).
On 22 July 2016 at 19:18,
Will it show multiple children (split trees?)
On 25 July 2016 at 15:23, Bartosz Dziewoński wrote:
> On 2016-07-25 16:20, Ed Sanders wrote:
>
>> Where do I find links to the parent commit and child commit(s)? All I can
>> see currently is a link to the parent's diffusion
On 2016-07-25 16:20, Ed Sanders wrote:
Where do I find links to the parent commit and child commit(s)? All I can
see currently is a link to the parent's diffusion commit(?!).
As someone who often commits a stack of 5+ dependent commits, these are
very useful to my workflow (or anyone reviewing
Dnia 15.07.2016 Isarra Yos napisał/a:
>
> * Diffs - using icons for back to change, previous file, next file is
> very unclear and hard to find; new users will not see them and have
> any idea what to do with them. The current textual 'up to change',
>
On the whole it is a huge improvement (thanks for all your work on this,
Chad & Daniel):
- finally one can navigate from the global comment to the inline comments
(although I wish they would stand out more in the history list)
- the super annoying bug where clicking anywhere on an old page with
On 13/07/16 06:50, Niklas Laxström wrote:
Many good and bad changes I can live with. One thing I will miss:
* Columns setting no longer wraps the diff lines. Horizontal scroll is
now unavoidable and cumbersome due to having to use either the mouse
or the arrow keys to move the cursor on the
This update will definitely improve our experience with git. As others have
said before, the inline editing will greatly speed up the review process and
improve code quality. This is especially true for the extensions, as you now do
not have to clone a repo or reject the commit just to fix a
On 07/12/2016 07:45 PM, Bartosz Dziewoński wrote:
> I have tested it and I love it. It is all I was hoping it would be and
> more. The inline commit editing is quite nice, the lists of related
> commits are useful, but the warnings about merge conflicts are the best
> thing ever. The sooner it's
I really like that you can now edit in browser without needing to clone the
repo now making mobile editing possible now.
But one thing there is no testing?
On Wednesday, 13 July 2016, 8:08, John Mark Vandenberg
wrote:
On Wed, Jul 13, 2016 at 10:03 AM, Chad
On Wed, Jul 13, 2016 at 10:03 AM, Chad wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 7:39 PM Danny B. wrote:
>> I assume that the slowness is just because it is testing environment and
>> production will be faster, but just in case, I'm mentioning that
Many good and bad changes I can live with. One thing I will miss:
* Columns setting no longer wraps the diff lines. Horizontal scroll is
now unavoidable and cumbersome due to having to use either the mouse
or the arrow keys to move the cursor on the line.
Tips for others:
* I previously used 'r'
Great! I especially like how scrolling works when comparing old and new
versions of files.
Thanks for upgrading.
On Wed, 13 Jul 2016 06:17:58 +0500, Chad Horohoe
wrote:
Hi,
Daniel and I have been spending a lot of time in the last week preparing
a
smooth
On Tue, Jul 12, 2016 at 7:39 PM Danny B. wrote:
> First of all - thanks for putting the effort to upgrade!
>
> Unfortunately that is the last positive sentence I'll have here. However,
> it
> is not your fault at all. It is all about expectations. And my expectations
I have tested it and I love it. It is all I was hoping it would be and
more. The inline commit editing is quite nice, the lists of related
commits are useful, but the warnings about merge conflicts are the best
thing ever. The sooner it's live, the better!
--
Bartosz Dziewoński
First of all - thanks for putting the effort to upgrade!
Unfortunately that is the last positive sentence I'll have here. However, it
is not your fault at all. It is all about expectations. And my expectations
were that the UI/UX will be much more mature than the current version we
use.
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