useful to add that you can just click the circle icon in the source control tab and it will open it (if you prefer to do the commits from there) you can also disable the emojis and other stuff from preferences
Hey, Scott! Whats up? Thanks for the video, man. Love the audio quality and the way you explain things. Can you tell me what theme and font youre using for your VScode on this one?
I've never fancied how github show commits side of the file or folders. I would like to be able to add short descriptions of what the file is for or what a folder contains. I could achieve that by creating "empty" commits or addings hundreds or read.me's but it's not sustainable. I think this feature could help to new developers and open source projects. Does anybody know if there is a way to achieve it?
I'm not a fan of using VScode UI for git, i use terminal. If you're like me the simple way to give yourself a reminder of convention, add a .gitmessage file to the repo. Inside you can then add a commented example, the convention tags, and URLs. If you've got VScode setup as your commit editor, when you do "git commit" (without the -m ) it will open this file in your editor as part of the commit msg.
Should you ever go down the emacs path then I recommend checking out the magit package... it greatly improved my workflow (disclaimer: I spend most of my time in a terminal window).
Excellent thank you very much for your time!
useful to add that you can just click the circle icon in the source control tab and it will open it (if you prefer to do the commits from there)
you can also disable the emojis and other stuff from preferences
2:15 you should've written "add" instead of "adds" to be conventional
Hey, Scott! Whats up? Thanks for the video, man. Love the audio quality and the way you explain things.
Can you tell me what theme and font youre using for your VScode on this one?
Thanks. This is really helpful.
I've never fancied how github show commits side of the file or folders. I would like to be able to add short descriptions of what the file is for or what a folder contains. I could achieve that by creating "empty" commits or addings hundreds or read.me's but it's not sustainable. I think this feature could help to new developers and open source projects. Does anybody know if there is a way to achieve it?
Very useful 🚀
what font did you use?
I'm not a fan of using VScode UI for git, i use terminal.
If you're like me the simple way to give yourself a reminder of convention, add a .gitmessage file to the repo. Inside you can then add a commented example, the convention tags, and URLs.
If you've got VScode setup as your commit editor, when you do "git commit" (without the -m ) it will open this file in your editor as part of the commit msg.
Should you ever go down the emacs path then I recommend checking out the magit package... it greatly improved my workflow (disclaimer: I spend most of my time in a terminal window).
That's pretty convenient. :D
tq
fix 48