![]() I'm just saying: You sound very frustrated when a large part of the problem is your reluctance to actually use Git. The edit view is the viewing mode you will use to modify or build EDI transactions. The right column displays the EDI segment and its accompanying elements. The left column can either display a segment’s formal name or a segment’s position in the EDI document. There are options for that, but let's keep this simple. EDI Notepad’s edit view displays EDI transaction sets in a columnar format. Of course, unlike ZIP, the time to clone a repository will increase when the repository's history grows. On my system just now, running the above command took 3.2 seconds. The git:-type URL is the one from the page you linked to. It is free, open-source, feature-rich, and supports 3rd party plugins to extend the functionality. ![]() For the repository you mention, you would do: $ git clone git:///SpringSource/spring-data-graph-examples.git Notepad++ (Notepad Plus Plus) is one of the best text editors available in the market today. ![]() It's a single Git invocation on the command line, and it will give you the code just as seen when you browse the repository on the web (when getting a ZIP archive, you will need to unpack it and so on, it's not always directly browsable). To me if a source repository is available for public it should take less than 10 seconds to have that code in my filesystem.Īnd of course, if you want to use Git (which GitHub is all about), then what you do to get the code onto your system is called "cloning the repository".
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