git: bccb39375b - main - comitter-guide: Add link to git for computer scientists

Warner Losh imp at FreeBSD.org
Tue Jun 15 01:17:29 UTC 2021


The branch main has been updated by imp:

URL: https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/doc/commit/?id=bccb39375bab8c2e9304993feef2564c13e2ec65

commit bccb39375bab8c2e9304993feef2564c13e2ec65
Author:     Warner Losh <imp at FreeBSD.org>
AuthorDate: 2021-06-15 01:16:07 +0000
Commit:     Warner Losh <imp at FreeBSD.org>
CommitDate: 2021-06-15 01:16:07 +0000

    comitter-guide: Add link to git for computer scientists
    
    Add a link that I've shared with several people who found it useful to
    get a good mental model of git. It's written specifically for computer
    scientists.
    
    Sponsored by:           Netflix
---
 documentation/content/en/articles/committers-guide/_index.adoc | 1 +
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)

diff --git a/documentation/content/en/articles/committers-guide/_index.adoc b/documentation/content/en/articles/committers-guide/_index.adoc
index 638c2a8100..401d0c97c0 100644
--- a/documentation/content/en/articles/committers-guide/_index.adoc
+++ b/documentation/content/en/articles/committers-guide/_index.adoc
@@ -283,6 +283,7 @@ There's a lot of them (search for "Git primer").
 https://danielmiessler.com/study/git/ and https://gist.github.com/williewillus/068e9a8543de3a7ef80adb2938657b6b are good overviews.
 The Git book is also complete, but much longer https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2.
 There is also this website https://ohshitgit.com/ for common traps and pitfalls of Git, in case you need guidance to fix things up.
+In addition, an introduction link:https://eagain.net/articles/git-for-computer-scientists/[targeted at computer scientists] has proven helpful to some.
 
 This document will assume that you've read through it and will try not to belabor the basics (though it will cover them briefly).
 


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