Quote: "IMHO in the beginning
every project should be one person, or at the most 3. Others can make
suggestions, but the guys doing the dev should pick which suggestions
go in.
Later, when the project becomes stable, THEN put it in Git where
everyone can have their way with it."
In fact, effectively this is what I did, the reason being I was
unsuccessful uploading my changes. But now, it looks like I succeeded
with this commit:
-----------------------------------------------
commit 799957ad4007aa8e272d18508e59f33903b7c44d
Author: edbarx <edbarx@???>
Date: Fri Aug 28 19:43:42 2015 +0100
GUI frontend: now supports wireless and wired connections. Code
added to protect the defaults in /etc/network/interfaces.
Backend C code: add another function connect_wired() and another
operation to backend code number 9. This is to connect a wired
connection. Both the frontend and the backend now refuse to disconnect
multiple connections. netman is now designed to handle one connection
at a time. Code has been added to minimize situations where multiple
instances of the backend are running.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Edward
On 28/08/2015, Steve Litt <slitt@???> wrote:
> On Fri, 28 Aug 2015 18:11:22 +0100
> Edward Bartolo <edbarx@???> wrote:
>
>> This is exasperating! Git is refusing my commits telling me everything
>> is up to date!
>>
>> This is effectively locking me out of development notwithstanding that
>> I spent hours upon hours developing. This puts me down.
>>
>> :(((
>
> Git: Not a fan.
>
> Oh, don't get me wrong: If it's a huge project with lots of
> contributors, Git is worth all the learning and close attention. But
> with a one or two person project, manual sharing, with a lot of
> discussion, via email is usually more productive. This is especially
> true of a brand new, constantly changing project with one or a couple
> authors.
>
> I lost my dmenu for Devuan docs somewhere in Devuan's git system, after
> first getting them so discombobbled that it took me hours of what
> should have been doc-writing time, just getting them restored in Git.
>
> I'll be rewriting those docs from scratch, and until they're finished,
> I'll have them readable on Troubleshooters.Com, not on anyone's Git.
> I'll put them on Devuan's Git when they're stable. IMHO in the beginning
> every project should be one person, or at the most 3. Others can make
> suggestions, but the guys doing the dev should pick which suggestions
> go in.
>
> Later, when the project becomes stable, THEN put it in Git where
> everyone can have their way with it.
>
> SteveT
>
> Steve Litt
> August 2015 featured book: Troubleshooting: Just the Facts
> http://www.troubleshooters.com/tjust
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