Learning Git
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@aaronstuder said in Learning Git:
@scottalanmiller so Git clone basicly makes a local copy of the repo on my local computer then I can add and commit from there?
Other way, use git clone to pull your repo from your host. Make the repo on the host, then git clone on your workstation to bring a copy down (even if it is empty.)
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@scottalanmiller worded badly via mobile. So I can use any directory I want? Thatโs pretty cool
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@aaronstuder said in Learning Git:
@scottalanmiller worded badly via mobile. So I can use any directory I want? Thatโs pretty cool
Think of it like NextCloud.... it'll sync any folder that you want.
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@scottalanmiller so what stops you from using this for file storage? Do they block certain extensions? Files over a certain size?
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@aaronstuder said in Learning Git:
@scottalanmiller so what stops you from using this for file storage? Do they block certain extensions? Files over a certain size?
It's just not practical for it. It's a text processing system. I think you'd find it pretty painful to use for anything else.
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There's also a GitHub Desktop application you can use to connect to / manage / pull down code from GitHub.
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@networknerd said in Learning Git:
There's also a GitHub Desktop application you can use to connect to / manage / pull down code from GitHub.
Any value to that, though? Basically all you really want to do is...
git add .; git commit -m "My note"; git push origin
That's it. A desktop app would just be in the way.
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Put in another vote here for gitlab.
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@aaronstuder said in Learning Git:
What the best resources to learn Git?
Also, I am assuming GitHub to the best repository to use?
Thank you for making the thread I've been meaning to make for a while but never got around to doing it.
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I use VS Code with GitLab.
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I use Gitlab because of the built in runners. It's nice to have the CI/CD pipeline built directly in.
Jenkins and others obviously work with Github but being able to have a local system do the testing (that's automatically kicked off) while using the hosted Gitlab is pretty awesome.
I also use VS code and Atom (with the Git Plus package).
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Free Plan Comparison
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@tim_g said in Learning Git:
I use VS Code with GitLab.
I need to install VS code. on my desktop. been hearing you two complement it.
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@jaredbusch said in Learning Git:
@tim_g said in Learning Git:
I use VS Code with GitLab.
I need to install VS code. on my desktop. been hearing you two complement it.
It's pretty nice. The built in Git stuff is nicer than Atom. To me it feels faster than Atom also.
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@jaredbusch said in Learning Git:
@tim_g said in Learning Git:
I use VS Code with GitLab.
I need to install VS code. on my desktop. been hearing you two complement it.
It's like Atom but with some benefits (and drawbacks.) If you like Atom and use it mostly for coding, VS Code might be the right choice for you.
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@Bundy-Associates uses Bitbucket for now. But we are at the 5 collaborator max, so if we need to add a new collaborator I will take the time to move it all to Gitlab.
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@scottalanmiller said in Learning Git:
@jaredbusch said in Learning Git:
@tim_g said in Learning Git:
I use VS Code with GitLab.
I need to install VS code. on my desktop. been hearing you two complement it.
It's like Atom but with some benefits (and drawbacks.) If you like Atom and use it mostly for coding, VS Code might be the right choice for you.
How well is the support for powershell in Atom? That's mainly the reason why I use VS Code for PowerShell.
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Atom + bitbucket here. Unless I'm allowed to do open source, then github.
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We use Bitbucket here. It is super cheap for small teams. We got JIRA and Bitbucket full versions running on in house servers with support for under $100 a year if you have less than 10 users.