That's a good idea, I'm going to sit on the sideline too until at least PMCs want to learn the 10 basic commands and know how to use Git as describe, I just wonder how are going to react contributors and committers if even PMCs don't show the good example, well, to say the truth, I'm fed up, after 450 emails in March + 3 Wiki pages written to make the people understand and have a good workflow using Git and reading noone cars or wants to learn, I don't want to fight anymore and not even work on the SDK tree.

Well, I already did my boxes closing the resolved JIRA, unassigned the others and committed my remote branch.

I wish you a lot of pleasure.

-Fred

-----Message d'origine----- From: Nicholas Kwiatkowski
Sent: Friday, April 05, 2013 2:11 PM
To: dev@flex.apache.org
Subject: Re: Still confused by git

+1 on this.  I've been sitting on the sidelines the last few weeks for that
reason.  I know there are a lot of standards that still need to be figured
out, and since I'm very green with GIT, I don't really have the time at the
moment to learn all the command line (i've been really busy with personal
and professional stuff the last few weeks as well).  My goal is not to use
the command line, but use my IDE like I did before.  Dropping to the
command line and typing 10 commands every time I want to do something is a
pain in the rear for those things that my IDE should be doing for me (I
usually have a dozen command prompt windows open at any given time, but
those are for truly interactive things).

-Nick

On Fri, Apr 5, 2013 at 5:44 AM, Justin Mclean <jus...@classsoftware.com>wrote:

Hi,

> There's also been a lot of discussion on when to rebase and when not.
I'm not clear on whether there has been a consensus on that.
I don't believe there is a consensus but that's mostly around how
important it is to keep a "clean" history and with respect to  Frederic
obvious knowledge in this area we still need to come up with a way people
new to git can contribute without knowing every intricate details of
obscure options to git commands. In part because not everyone will use the
command line.

Thanks,
Justin

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