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by andrewmcwatters
321 days ago
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Good ideas. You mentioning your locally cloned repo was what spurred this. I wanted to do something a little more robust than just copy and paste the file from the other repository, but I also didn't want to inject the entire project as a dependency for a single file. It feels like it would be excessive to perform a remote call if we already have the repository locally checked out, so I'll think that one over. I would like to add that! I will also think more about automatically committing after `pull`, other standard git commands have --no-commit arguments, so this would be a bit different, since we're behaving a bit like `git-fetch`. Edit: Would you like me to add you to a Contributors section of the README.md? Thanks for your input! |
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what shines combined with a push-subcommand when doing "active development" in the downstream repo - since it can shove the fix you made back into the upstream so you can commit and release it there
("push" may then also have a --with-commit option that 1) makes a commit in the local upstream 2) updates downstreams `.git-remote-files` commit-key)
on --no-commit idk... while i very much like the idea of it being able to auto-commit, default-enabled might be a little overreaching but not 100% certain on this... - maybe your `--commit <commit>` could become `--ref <ref>` instead to free up --(no-)commit? (ref might even be more git-nomenclature correct ;))
readme: no thanks, just on a throwaway anyhow ;)