« first day (177 days earlier)      last day (1633 days later) » 

10:30 AM
@marmot I recreated my pull request to your pgf-fork.
 
 
3 hours later…
1:00 PM
@marmot Don't show this image to any mathematician - they might get a heart attack :)
 
 
1 hour later…
2:26 PM
What do you think about this?
The LaTeX Wikibooks is now featured in the homepage of Wikibooks.
 
@JouleV pretty mixed feelings. It is great to see that it gets attention, but in the same time it is bad that it gets attention, as the information is sometimes imprecise or out-of-date, or doesn't reflect best practice.
 
user11685757
2:58 PM
@Skillmon Thanks! What do I need to do?
 
@marmot take a look at the changes made at "Files changed" in the tab bar. If they all look good you can accept the pull request, this will merge my changes into your origins master branch. If you have questions or concerns, leave them there.
 
user11685757
@Skillmon How can one accept a pull request?
 
@marmot there should be a button on Github somewhere here
 
user11685757
@Skillmon I found some button. Did it work? (It is a bit counter-intuitive...)
 
@marmot "Pull request successfully merged and closed"
 
user11685757
3:14 PM
@Skillmon Oh great! Something that could be done in CVS with a single command can now be done with only 10 mouse clicks! ;-)
 
@marmot in github. In decentralized git I'd just do git fetch <remote>&&git merge <remote>/<branch>. Github is to git what Overleaf is to LaTeX.
 
user11685757
@Skillmon OMG! The famous nail in the coffin.
 
@marmot maybe that was harsh... :)
 
user11685757
@Skillmon Maybe. ;-) But I think your description is good, both of them give a GUI to users who do not know what they are doing. ;-)
 
3:37 PM
@marmot the advantage of Github is that you can get pull request by people who wouldn't have access to your decentralised server otherway.
 
user11685757
@Skillmon OK. Still my problem is that I do not know what I am doing, maybe because I was working with CVS for too long so that many concepts in git are completely counter-intuitive to me and I am therefore always doing the wrong thing or trying to go in a wrong direction. So, a bit similar to Overleaf, the GUI promises an easy solution but if you do not understand the basic concepts ultimately you will be screwed up.
 
3:58 PM
@marmot then, like the optimal solution for Overleaf users: Read a decent introduction!
 
 
2 hours later…
user11685757
6:24 PM
@Skillmon That completely defeats the purpose, right? If you are willing to read an introduction, you will not be willing to use click-click-click to prepare your documents.
 
6:55 PM
@marmot it was meant as, don't use click-click-click :) I have no idea whether there is some great CLI program to use Github, though :(
 
7:51 PM
I am not a git expert, but I have a very simple workflow that has worked very well till now... github.com/circuitikz/circuitikz/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md
 
 
2 hours later…
user11685757
9:49 PM
@Rmano Thanks a lot! But please forgive me, I can not even parse "be based on the master branch of the circuitikz repository;". That is, I have conceptual difficulties understanding these things. Every now and then I believe to understand these things, but then I see something that proves me wrong. Is there any simple but clear manual that explains these things in a way that a physicist or mathematician can understand them?
 
10:08 PM
@marmot I have learnt what I know using the Pro git book here: git-scm.com/book/en/v2
Not really easy but well written. I think about git history as a stack of patches - - and each branch is just a series of patches that "springs out" on a specific point of the stack. Playing a bit with a toy repository in your machine and a good graphical viewer of the commit tree is helpful - I use `gitk in Linux.
 
user11685757
10:24 PM
@Rmano Thanks again! (I was always hoping it would be simpler than that. All I want to do is to have a repo in which I can put stuff in and commit the changes every now and then. And of course if others add something, there should be simple command approve, or reject. Turns out if I want to update files, I need to add them, and so on. None of this makes sense to me, and I have always the feeling I am doing something completely wrong.)
 

« first day (177 days earlier)      last day (1633 days later) »