Thanks. The only thing I seem to have in my reposiitory is github-cli -- is that the same thing? On Thu, 07 Mar 2024 07:09:35 -0500, Robert Melton wrote: > > https://sr.ht -- SourceHut is a place to manage code, like Github. > > gh is a terminal tool for working with Github. > > > On Mar 7, 2024, at 01:00, John Covici <covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > What is sr.ht? Also, how to use github from the command line -- never > > heard of how to do that. > > > > On Wed, 06 Mar 2024 22:34:49 -0500, > > Robert Melton (via emacspeak Mailing List) wrote: > >> > >> [1 <text/plain; us-ascii (7bit)>] > >> Not pushing for it in anyway, but just as an FYI for those interested. > >> > >> sr.ht actually is completely accessible from the command line hut > >> tool, they actually go beyond gh, as I believe every last feature of > >> the website is supported. > >> > >> Additionally, the entire website and all features work 100% without > >> javascript so the experience is eww is actually pleasant. > >> > >> > >>> On Mar 6, 2024, at 20:59, T.V Raman <raman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> > >>> 1+ on both points. > >>> > >>> A good thing about Github is that the commandline gh lets you do > >>> everything you can on the Web, and by limiting ourselves to using > >>> email for most things and using gh to close issues, we get to be > >>> relatively free of getting too tangled into the Github Web mess. > >>> > >>> > >>> Tim Cross writes: > >>>> > >>>>> For now, I'll recommend the lazy solution: do nothing, just remember to > >>>>> CC the list. Let's see how that scales. > >>>> > >>>> Always like the lazy approach! > >>>> > >>>> More seriously, I do feel this needs some carful thought. We want to get > >>>> the right balance here. I think the point about early issue discussions > >>>> often not being of much value to the list generally is quite > >>>> relevant. We don't want too much 'noise' on the list. > >>>> > >>>> Ideally, we probably want the ability to send interersting threads from > >>>> issues to the list - those which show how to solve a common problem or > >>>> those which show how people can investigate, tweak or otherwise improve > >>>> their emacspeak configuration. > >>>> > >>>> As a trial and to see how useful the list finds it, I'd agree that what > >>>> we should do is just CC the list when an issue seems worthwhile to share > >>>> with everyone. > >>>> > >>>> BTW the point Robert mentioned regarding sourcehut mayu be worth > >>>> consideration. One of the main aims of sourcehut was to have workflow > >>>> driven primarily via email instead of JS based web interfaces. Any > >>>> workflow which does not include JS dependencies is likely going to be > >>>> better from an emacs and emacspeak perspective. > >>> > >>> -- > >> > >> -- > >> Robert "robertmeta" Melton > >> lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >> > >> [2 <text/plain; UTF-8 (8bit)>] > >> Emacspeak discussion list -- emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > >> To unsubscribe send email to: > >> emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with a subject of: unsubscribe > > > > -- > > Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: > > How do > > you spend it? > > > > John Covici wb2una > > covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > -- > Robert "robertmeta" Melton > lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > -- Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: How do you spend it? John Covici wb2una covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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