Mercurial > hg > easyhg
changeset 500:2d59eda59895
Minor help edit
author | Chris Cannam |
---|---|
date | Tue, 23 Aug 2011 10:46:33 +0100 |
parents | b3309be1640f |
children | 6bb2a1f3087c |
files | help/a-33.html help/topics/33.txt |
diffstat | 2 files changed, 32 insertions(+), 28 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/help/a-33.html Mon Aug 22 21:31:55 2011 +0100 +++ b/help/a-33.html Tue Aug 23 10:46:33 2011 +0100 @@ -3,26 +3,28 @@ <h2>I tried to push my changes, but it told me “the remote repository may have been changed by someone else” and refused</h2> -<p>This error indicates that the remote repository has some changes in it -that you do not have in your local repository (and that are in -branches that you have also changed). Perhaps someone else made these -changes and pushed them, or they may have come from you pushing from a -different computer.</p> +<p>This indicates that the remote repository has some changes in it that +you do not have in your local repository (and that are in branches +that you have also changed).</p> + +<p>Perhaps someone else made these changes and pushed them, or they may +have been pushed by you from a different computer.</p> + +<p><b>Why should that prevent me from pushing my changes?</b></p> <p>A good principle is that you should review and test your changes -before you push them to another repository. Although (with a -distributed version control system) it's generally OK to commit +before you push them to another repository. It may be OK to commit changes locally that don't really work or that aren't complete enough -to test, it's a bad idea to push anything that would cause the remote -repository to have an untested set of changes in it.</p> +to test, but it's a bad idea to push anything that would cause the +remote repository to have an untested set of changes in it.</p> -<p>For that reason, if you change some files and someone else changes -others and you both push them without knowing about the other one, -Mercurial must refuse whichever push happens later – it won't simply -merge the changes because the result might not make any sense.</p> +<p>For this reason, if you change some files, someone else changes some +others, and you both try to push them without knowing about the other +one, Mercurial must refuse the second push – it can't simply merge +the changes because the result might not make any sense.</p> <p>Instead you must pull the other person's changes and merge them -locally before you push. Fortunately, this is easy to do.</p> +locally before you push. Fortunately, this is easy to do:</p> <p><b>1. Click Pull on the main toolbar at the top of the EasyMercurial window.</b> <ul><li>You should see that some changes are pulled and added to your local repository. This will usually lead to a forked graph in the History pane, as your changes and the other user's were both started from the same parent at the same time.</li></ul></p>
--- a/help/topics/33.txt Mon Aug 22 21:31:55 2011 +0100 +++ b/help/topics/33.txt Tue Aug 23 10:46:33 2011 +0100 @@ -2,26 +2,28 @@ I tried to push my changes, but it told me "the remote repository may have been changed by someone else" and refused -This error indicates that the remote repository has some changes in it -that you do not have in your local repository (and that are in -branches that you have also changed). Perhaps someone else made these -changes and pushed them, or they may have come from you pushing from a -different computer. +This indicates that the remote repository has some changes in it that +you do not have in your local repository (and that are in branches +that you have also changed). + +Perhaps someone else made these changes and pushed them, or they may +have been pushed by you from a different computer. + +*Why should that prevent me from pushing my changes?* A good principle is that you should review and test your changes -before you push them to another repository. Although (with a -distributed version control system) it's generally OK to commit +before you push them to another repository. It may be OK to commit changes locally that don't really work or that aren't complete enough -to test, it's a bad idea to push anything that would cause the remote -repository to have an untested set of changes in it. +to test, but it's a bad idea to push anything that would cause the +remote repository to have an untested set of changes in it. -For that reason, if you change some files and someone else changes -others and you both push them without knowing about the other one, -Mercurial must refuse whichever push happens later -- it won't simply -merge the changes because the result might not make any sense. +For this reason, if you change some files, someone else changes some +others, and you both try to push them without knowing about the other +one, Mercurial must refuse the second push -- it can't simply merge +the changes because the result might not make any sense. Instead you must pull the other person's changes and merge them -locally before you push. Fortunately, this is easy to do. +locally before you push. Fortunately, this is easy to do: *1. Click Pull on the main toolbar at the top of the EasyMercurial window.*