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Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?
From: |
Nicolas Richard |
Subject: |
Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'? |
Date: |
Fri, 14 Nov 2014 11:01:36 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/31.1.1 |
Le 14/11/2014 06:27, Eli Zaretskii a écrit :
> Ah, okay. It's indeed "origin".
FWIW I just realized that I like this presentation of git concepts :
http://gitolite.com/gcs.html
because it's short and focuses on ideas. That also means it won't get
you started if you want to do things and know nothing, but my guess is
that you already know the basic git commit/pull/push stuff.
If you want a quick presentation on remotes, they are explained from
this point: http://gitolite.com/gcs.html#(23)
Nicolas.
- Both 'master' and 'trunk'?, Eli Zaretskii, 2014/11/13
- Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?, Andreas Schwab, 2014/11/13
- Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?, Eli Zaretskii, 2014/11/13
- Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?, Nicolas Richard, 2014/11/13
- Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?, Eli Zaretskii, 2014/11/13
- Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?, Nicolas Richard, 2014/11/13
- Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?, Eli Zaretskii, 2014/11/14
- Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?,
Nicolas Richard <=
- Re: Both 'master' and 'trunk'?, Eli Zaretskii, 2014/11/14