because i already know and use git everyday for personal use and at
work. So i know it. in mercurial i kinda know how to pull the updates.
heh. just never really used it much. Not saying it isnt easy to learn
or better/worse. Just that im already using git. if the core was in
git i could so git submodules for the individual applications so all i
would have to do is checkout web2py and update the app and i have
everything. I have no idea how to set that up in mercurial or even how
to mercurial in general.

On Jul 20, 9:12 pm, Jonathan Lundell <jlund...@pobox.com> wrote:
> On Jul 20, 2011, at 7:05 PM, luckysmack wrote:
>
>
>
> > oh yea? well thats handy. am i able to fork/clone a mercurial repo as
> > a git repo?
>
> Why git, btw? Seems like sticking with hg would be more straightforward.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Jul 20, 4:33 am, blackthorne <francisco....@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> be aware that google code hosting now supports git..
>
> >> On Jul 20, 4:44 am, luckysmack <luckysm...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >>> Well i was going to for the original. But it being so out of date, i
> >>> thought i would just take the mercurial branch and use a tool to
> >>> convert the code and its branches with history to git. that way it is
> >>> exactly what is in the mercurial repos. But doing that i cant fork it.
> >>> i would need to create my own repo. which would mean there would be
> >>> duplicate repos for web2py. is there a way i can for the one on github
> >>> and then merge in the converted mercurial to git copy? since they
> >>> essentially have separate remotes. Anyone know of a way i could do
> >>> this?
>
> >>> On Jul 19, 8:31 pm, luckysmack <luckysm...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >>>> Letting those users out there know that I will forking the web2py on
> >>>> github (which is outdated) and will be updating it as I will need it
> >>>> and its easier (for me at least) to keep all my repos in one location.
> >>>> Ive already forked it and will be updating it shortly.
>
> >>>>https://github.com/luckysmack/web2py

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