commit | 2088685f1f1a89c88738b8f040f92425e0606289 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Andrew Bonventre <andybons@gmail.com> | Tue Feb 13 20:48:30 2018 -0500 |
committer | Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org> | Wed Feb 14 01:49:08 2018 +0000 |
tree | 61b9599dd092d94223367901dfe1d4962686ff4f | |
parent | d96f3d425e2f1fa5a581573cce5ee5ca3ff0194e [diff] |
Update quotes.txt Change-Id: Ic9f3f6e68d4ac1f43a0c9796d167927649b7035d GitHub-Last-Rev: 941c2e33e5022af43983b8ae41831b7f63a3e906 GitHub-Pull-Request: golang/scratch#20 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/93837 Reviewed-by: Andrew Bonventre <andybons@golang.org>
This repository is mainly for use by people learning how to use Gerrit and contribute to Go.
Click here for a tutorial on how to get started with a contribution to this repository.
A fuller, text-based tutorial based around the core Go project can be found here.
Add a folder with your username, and put a main function in there. You can put whatever you want in your main function; see the existing directories for examples.
All files should have the standard licensing header, and add appropriate documentation see the other files in this repository for an example.
If you have needed to change a Github pull request, you probably just added a second commit with the requested changes and pushed it. By contrast, all changes opened in Gerrit are a single commit, which means you need to amend your commit if the reviewer requests feedback.
To amend a previous commit, run git add (list of files you changed)
to add your changes, then run git commit --amend
to amend the commit to add new data. Your commit message should still summarize the entire commit (“Add kevinburke/main.go”), not just the change a reviewer asked for (“Fix typo”).
After you amend the commit, re-run git codereview mail
to push that change to the server. Then in the Gerrit UI, find the in-line comments left by your reviewer, click “Done”, go back to the main PR page, and click “Reply” => “Send” to tell your reviewer that you've addressed your feedback.
Once you get a “Code-Review: +2” from a Go contributor, your change will be merged!
Gerrit is not easy to get started with, and we want to help you out. If you are having trouble with Gerrit, contact the golang-devexp mailing list for help!