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View the issues page for rails/rails.
Your project’s issues page can be as simple or as sophisticated as you like. Filter by open and closed issues, assignees, labels, and milestones. Sort by issue age, number of comments, and update time.
●Keyboard shortcuts make issue assignment and labeling fast.
●Only teammates and collaborators can create and view issues on private repositories.
●Anyone may create and view issues on public repositories.
Labels are another way to organize your issues and can be customized with your own colors.
Milestones are great at helping everyone work towards a goal. Set a due date, name your milestone, then start grouping issues together.
View the milestones page for twbs/bootstrap.
closes #35 somewhere in your commit message. Once the commit is in your default branch (usually master), the issue will be closed.
Supported keywords: closes, fixes, resolves, and more
Anyone with write access to your repository may close an issue or leave a note.
View a pull request for jquery/jquery.
Pull Requests are living conversations that streamline the process of discussing, reviewing, and managing changes to code.
Pull Request = Code + Issue + Code Comments
Each Pull Request takes into account not only what you would like pulled, but also where you intend those changes to be applied. From there, your team can discuss the changes as a whole, individual parts, or even specific lines. Later commits addressing concerns or ideas appear as part of the conversation.
View commit comments for jquery/jquery.
GitHub allows you and your teammates to have a detailed discussion about every commit that is pushed to your project. Should it be included? Was it done correctly? Should something else be added? Talk about changes to your code with everyone involved before releasing or incorporating them.
You can have conversations on entire commits as well as individual lines of code.
View a compare view for rails/rails.
With GitHub you can easily and efficiently compare any two branches in your project or network. See what work is unique to a branch with respect to another branch—that is, if you were to merge the branches together, what changes would be applied?
The GitHub compare view shows a list of all the commits unique to a branch, the sum of all the files changed across all of those commits, and a unified or split diff of those changes to clearly summarize what the branch represents.
View a sample GeoJSON file.
View a sample 3D STL file.
If you prefer the command line or another native client, you can use those as well.
By the way, every GitHub repository is also a Subversion repository.
Use your favorite SVN tools to checkout, branch, and commit to GitHub repositories.
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