Simone,
What are your thought concerning the removal of the direct references of SUN
encoder?
I would would have thought that it would have been poor form to have direct
references.
Brett
From: Simone Giannecchini [notificati...@github.com]
Sent: Monday, 1
Hello everyone at GeoTools! I wanted to revise my weekly report for the
second week(which was between June 23-29).I did not include some of the
tasks that were completed, so I wanted to send another weekly report. I
also did not include the tasks I will be completing this week and will
attach them
I finally resorted to the Git command line today. With some help from this
page:
http://docs.geotools.org/latest/developer/procedures/git.html
and from this page:
http://learn.github.com/p/normal.html
I managed to clone more fork of the GeoTools Git repo and add commit a new
folder and text file
I found out how to view the pull requests for the main GeoTools Git repo on
GitHub today.
Is there a way to import this pull request from the GeoTools master to my
fork of the GeoTools master on GitHub?
Should I then create a branch on my fork to integrate and examine the
changes in the pull
I finally resorted to the Git command line today. With some help from this
page:
http://docs.geotools.org/latest/developer/procedures/git.html
and from this page:
http://learn.github.com/p/normal.html
If I can kindly recommend: http://ndpsoftware.com/git-cheatsheet.html
(Personally I use
Hi Landon,
Unsure which OS you are using.
I use Windows and I use Tortoise Git as well as the command line.
Tortoise Git does about 80-90% of the day to day work. For the unusual I revert
to the command line.
Brett
From: Landon Blake [mailto:sunburned.surve...@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, 2
When examining the repos of other developers (especially when reviewing
pull requests), I often:
(1) add their repo as a remote:
git remote add foo g...@github.com:foo/geotools.git
(2) fetch commits, which does no merging:
git fetch foo
(3) checkout the commit of interest (a detached