I'm not much of a visual/ui design guy but I'll see what I can come up with.
SDR
On Aug 25, 2012 9:09 AM, "Richard Hipp" wrote:
>
>
> On Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 10:25 AM, Scott Robison wrote:
>
>>
>> As for the color coding, I was not referring to branch colors, I was
>> referring to colors used to
On Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 10:25 AM, Scott Robison wrote:
>
> As for the color coding, I was not referring to branch colors, I was
> referring to colors used to highlight bullet characters in an admin/config
> page.
>
That whole colored-dot thing on the users page is hokey and needs to be
completely
Thanks for the info. I was going to tackle that myself today so that I
could get that benefit, and appreciate the pointers. Of course, submitting
it (along with eventual paperwork) gives me 'practical experience' with
pushing stuff back to a master repo (where my current personal project
needs won'
Ah, then perhaps my first edit will be to document the undocumented rather
than implement the unimplemented. :) To answer your question, yes I am
converting a smallish multipurpose svn repository I've been using for about
three years. It has multiple projects in it that I don't want to all
migrate
On Friday, August 24, 2012 10:35 PM, Richard Hipp wrote:
> Fossil keeps track of which files have changed (by default) by looking
> at the file size and the mtime. If neither the file size nor the mtime
> have changed, fossil (by default) assumes that the content of the file
> is also unchanged.
>
On Sat, Aug 25, 2012 at 01:47:44AM -0600, Scott Robison wrote:
Hi there,
> 2. I am color blind. The color coding of bullet points in the "Edit User"
> pages explaining which marks indicate what is practically worthless to me
I think that is, "fossil ui" in an open checkout, then in the browser
c
On 2012-08-25 09:47, Scott Robison wrote:
I downloaded the lastest Windows fossil build tonight and am giving
DVCS another shot. Some notes:
1. I like the fact that I could --date-override the initial create
date stamp.
1a. I wish that I could --date-override a commit at the command line
so that
I downloaded the lastest Windows fossil build tonight and am giving DVCS
another shot. Some notes:
1. I like the fact that I could --date-override the initial create date
stamp.
1a. I wish that I could --date-override a commit at the command line so
that I didn't have to edit the date stamp via th
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