Document1

advertisement
Search results for python
1.
Dulwich
/book/en/Appendix-B:-Embedding-Git-in-your-Applications-Dulwich
Dulwich There is also a pure-Python Git implementation - Dulwich. The project is hosted
under https
2.
Libgit2
/book/en/Appendix-B:-Embedding-Git-in-your-Applications-Libgit2
="paragraph"> The bindings for Libgit2 in Python are called Pygit2, and can be found at
https://www.pygit2.org. Our example program:
3.
Migrating to Git
/book/en/Git-and-Other-Systems-Migrating-to-Git
sequences understood by the python string_escape encoding are supported. If the author
mapping file does not contain a matching <input>, that author will be sent on to Git
4.
Git Hooks
/book/en/Customizing-Git-Git-Hooks
thrown in, but any properly named executable scripts will work fine – you can write them
in Ruby or Python or whatever language you are familiar with. If you want to use the
bundled hook scripts, you’ll
5.
Rewriting History
/book/en/Git-Tools-Rewriting-History
> has many pitfalls, and is no longer the recommended way to rewrite history. Instead,
consider using git-filter-repo, which is a Python script that does a better job for most
applications
6.
Git as a Client
/book/en/Git-and-Other-Systems-Git-as-a-Client
for Python. If you have Python installed, this is as simple as:
7.
git-instaweb
/docs/git-instaweb
configuration file will be added at the end of the command-line. Currently apache2,
lighttpd, mongoose, plackup, python and webrick are supported. (Default: lighttpd) -m:: -module-path:: The
8.
git-for-each-ref
/docs/git-for-each-ref
git-for-each-ref(1) =================== NAME ---- git-for-each-ref - Output
information on each ref SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] 'git for-each-ref' [--count=] [--shell|-perl|--python|--tcl
9.
gitattributes
/docs/gitattributes
` suitable for source code in the PHP language. - `python` suitable for source code in the
Python language. - `ruby` suitable for source code in the Ruby language. - `rust` suitable
for source code in
10.
git-fast-import
/docs/git-fast-import
contention). DEVELOPMENT COST ---------------- A typical frontend for fast-import
tends to weigh in at approximately 200 lines of Perl/Python/Ruby code. Most developers
have been able to create working
Download