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Andrew Fletcher
Currently, I have a situation where I have two repositories.  The first is where I've held the code since the beginning.  The second has come on board recently and is the client repo.  However, rather than shut the original down, I want to keep both running with the same code.  How do I synchronise them so that they contain the same thing? Configure a remote that points to the upstream repository in Git to sync changes you make in a fork with the original repository....
Andrew Fletcher
When attempting to do a git push, are you getting the following...
Andrew Fletcher
This code is from Drupal 9 back-end for a React front-end via REST API. Working...
Andrew Fletcher
In this woalk through I am going to use GitHub.  However, the steps are...
Andrew Fletcher
Have you noticed through your Google account that there are items being indexed...
Andrew Fletcher
Wanting to create a new repository on GitHub, add in a few of the available options that can come with an initial repository such as: .gitignore for the platform you are building on README.md for detailed notes - particularly if the repository if public LICENSE - again important if the repository if public However, once you add one or more of these items, you will need to merge the repository with your local environment.  This article walks through creating a new GitHub repository and...
Andrew Fletcher
As a process I apply patches locally first, then using git upload the update(s)...