On Sat, Mar 4, 2023 at 11:03 AM Ingo Klöcker wrote:
> On Freitag, 3. März 2023 22:49:06 CET Ben Cooksley wrote:
> > In all cases i'm aware of, the files have been in either SVG, JSON or XML
> > in format.
> >
> > To fix this, and allow changes to be merged please add a ".gitattributes"
> > file a
On Freitag, 3. März 2023 22:49:06 CET Ben Cooksley wrote:
> In all cases i'm aware of, the files have been in either SVG, JSON or XML
> in format.
>
> To fix this, and allow changes to be merged please add a ".gitattributes"
> file at the top level of the Git repository you are seeing this behavio
Hi all,
Over the past few months Sysadmin has periodically received reports of our
Git hooks failing when processing commits in certain circumstances.
Looking at all of these instances a clear trend has emerged, with files
that have lines in them that are extremely and excessively long being the
>> -
KDE Git Kit would be a cool name IMO. Three times three letters.
>> - Kommit
> I really like "Kommit". It starts with "K" and is just to the point.
Kommit seems like a fine name to me as well.
Hello,
I suggest:
- ReThinKit
One should revisit the code which is going to be commited and really
think what to write in the commit message, so that it can be understood
later and also for other people. (or simply that you do not end up
scolder for weird merge commits)
Best regards,
Juraj
O
Two name ideas came to me
- DeltaKit (delta as difference in physics)
- Konformity/Konform (conformity as antonym to difference)
cheers
On 3/2/23 19:32, Hamed Masafi wrote:
Considering that gitklient is very close to the first version, I have to say
something about its naming.
When I started t
Kommit makes a lot of sense to me.
On Thu, Mar 2, 2023 at 2:57 PM Albert Astals Cid wrote:
> El dijous, 2 de març de 2023, a les 19:32:30 (CET), Hamed Masafi va
> escriure:
> > Considering that gitklient is very close to the first version, I have to
> > say something about its naming.
> > When I