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From: | Jonathan Kulp |
Subject: | Re: CM 1.1 git question |
Date: | Thu, 19 Feb 2009 15:23:43 -0600 |
User-agent: | Thunderbird 2.0.0.19 (X11/20090105) |
Maximilian Albert wrote:
Awesome. Thanks Max and Jean-Charles for these tips. I figured there was probably a way to tell it to ignore files or whole directories (like I do with rsync when backing up my machine, for example) but I hadn't gotten around to checking on it yet. I'll do this after the kids are in bed tonight. Thanks!2009/2/19 Jonathan Kulp <address@hidden>:After I compile, though, and then do "git status" I get an enormous number of untracked files created since the last commit.You should create a file called ".gitignore" (note the initial dot) in the toplevel directory of the source tree which is tracked by git. In there you list all the files which you don't want to be tracked. You can use asterisks as well (as in "*.txt"). Then git will ignore these files and only show the status of the remaining ones. Cheers, Max
Jon -- Jonathan Kulp http://www.jonathankulp.com
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