##// END OF EJS Templates
refactor to improve cell switching in edit mode...
refactor to improve cell switching in edit mode This code was repeated in both CodeCell and TextCell, both of which are extensions of Cell, so this just unifies the logic in Cell. TextCell had logic here to check if the cell was rendered or not, but I don't believe it is possible to end up triggering such a code path. (Should that be required, I can always just add back these methods to TextCell, performing the .rendered==True check, and calling the Cell prior to this, code mirror at_top would only return true on if the cursor was at the first character of the top line. Now, pressing up arrow on any character on the top line will take you to the cell above. The same applies for the bottom line. Pressing down arrow would only go to the next cell if the cursor was at a location *after* the last character (something that is only possible to achieve in vim mode if the last line is empty, for example). Now, down arrow on any character of the last line will go to the next cell.

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configure_git.rst
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Configure git

Overview

git config --global user.email you@yourdomain.example.com
git config --global user.name "Your Name Comes Here"

In detail

This is to tell git_ who you are, for labeling any changes you make to the code. The simplest way to do this is from the command line:

git config --global user.email you@yourdomain.example.com
git config --global user.name "Your Name Comes Here"

This will write the settings into your git configuration file - a file called .gitconfig in your home directory.

Advanced git configuration

You might well benefit from some aliases to common commands.

For example, you might well want to be able to shorten git checkout to git co.

The easiest way to do this, is to create a .gitconfig file in your home directory, with contents like this:

[core]
        editor = emacs
[user]
        email = you@yourdomain.example.com
        name = Your Name Comes Here
[alias]
        st = status
        stat = status
        co = checkout
[color]
        diff = auto
        status = true

(of course you'll need to set your email and name, and may want to set your editor). If you prefer, you can do the same thing from the command line:

git config --global core.editor emacs
git config --global user.email you@yourdomain.example.com
git config --global user.name "Your Name Comes Here"
git config --global alias.st status
git config --global alias.stat status
git config --global alias.co checkout
git config --global color.diff auto
git config --global color.status true

These commands will write to your user's git configuration file ~/.gitconfig.

To set up on another computer, you can copy your ~/.gitconfig file, or run the commands above.