On Tue, 2016-01-12 at 19:08 +0100, Matthias Fischer wrote: > Hi, > > On 10.01.2016 22:54, Michael Tremer wrote: > > I find this process with "git send-email" very easy... > > Just a few "cents" from me... ;-) > > I don't know how you would call it: > > I'm doing it the "old-fashioned way": strictly by command-line, > directly > from GIT on my Ubuntu 'Devel'-PC. No GUI, no mouse, just console and > keyboard. Nothing but blinking cursors and GIT commands. > git pull ..., git status ..., nano or mc-editor, make ..., git push > ..., > git sendmail ...: thats nearly all I use and need. I never considered that anyone would use something else than the command line. > And after struggling through some - sometimes rather weird - > problems, > I'm getting used to it and wouldn't want to do it any other way. > Its logical and fast. Not comfortable, but 'at the roots'. Git is - of course like anything else - something that everyone needs to learn at the start. After that is indeed logical and fast. > And while creating a patch for a new 'nano 2.5.1'-version > (http://patchwork.ipfire.org/patch/208/) I got the thought that > perhaps > it would help others if I would ~record the process of creating this > - > rather easy - patch with some "how I did it" explanations and/or > screenshots so they could get a grip on the procedure? Thinking of > "Building Addons", perhaps we could put something like that in Wiki? > Not > too complicated, just showing how to build an rather easy patch and > push > it/send it through GIT. Maybe we should setup a page on the wiki to explain using git send -email. I thought people read man pages from time to time which makes this obsolete. > > Sorry, I got Windows 7 running, but none of the mentioned tools here, > so > my prerequisits may differ. > > It would take some time, but I think, this could be a way to make > things > easier. > > Jm2C > > Best, > Matthias > -Michael