annotate help/topics/10.txt @ 557:57a7f95ef400 find

Make find widget behave as if text is cleared when it's closed, and restored when it's opened again
author Chris Cannam
date Thu, 23 Feb 2012 15:28:29 +0000
parents e6141a238811
children
rev   line source
Chris@494 1 {Opening and initialising things}
Chris@494 2
Chris@494 3 Someone gave me a repository URL and asked me to clone it
Chris@494 4
Chris@494 5 A Mercurial repository location is usually described by a URL, like
Chris@494 6 that of a website.
Chris@494 7
Chris@494 8 For example, the URL for the repository containing the source code for
Chris@494 9 EasyMercurial itself is @https://bitbucket.org/cannam/easyhg@.
Chris@494 10
Chris@494 11 To get a copy of the files in a repository, you need to _clone_ the
Chris@494 12 repository from the remote URL into a folder on your own computer. To
Chris@494 13 do this,
Chris@494 14
Chris@494 15 *1. Click the Open toolbar button or use File -> Open*
Chris@494 16
Chris@495 17 #openremote50
Chris@494 18
Chris@495 19 *2. Select "Remote repository" as the thing you want to open*
Chris@494 20
Chris@494 21 *3. Enter the repository URL into the URL field*
Chris@494 22
Chris@494 23 *4. Give the name of a folder on your local computer to clone into* --
Chris@494 24 this folder will be created for you, so it shouldn't be one that already
Chris@494 25 exists
Chris@494 26
Chris@494 27 *5. Click OK*
Chris@494 28
Chris@494 29 If the remote repository has restricted access, you may be asked to
Chris@494 30 provide a username and password to log in to the server it is hosted
Chris@494 31 on. If the repository is large, you may have to wait a while for all the
Chris@494 32 data to be transferred.
Chris@494 33
Chris@494 34 Provided the clone has been successful, you should now have a local
Chris@495 35 repository to start working in.
Chris@494 36
Chris@495 37 * Note: the equivalent Mercurial command for this is *hg clone*