Hi Carol,

my recomendation is that you make a user in github, then make a fork of
apache flex mirror in your user, and finaly start playing with all the
things git and github can give you, so you end understanding the sharing
and community driven philosophy behind all this stuff.

Thanks


2012/8/20 Carol Frampton <cfram...@adobe.com>

>
>
> On 8/20/12 11 :56AM, "Omar Gonzalez" <omarg.develo...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >>
> >> I understand the answer is not in the book but first I have to learn
> >>what
> >> pull and push requests are.
> >>
> >> Carol
> >>
> >>
> >Just to add some clarity to these two terms, sorry if you already know.
> >
> >First, there is no such thing as a push request, there are only pull
> >requests.
> >
> >A pull request is not the same as the command "git pull", they're similar
> >in concept but different in the context of GitHub.
> >
> >A "Pull Request" is a GitHub term that is used to notify the owner of a
> >repository that you have forked that you would like them to review a
> >commit(s) that you have done, comment on them if changes are required, and
> >if not required then please 'git fetch' these changes and 'git merge' them
> >into the main repository that the fork was forked from. GitHub makes the
> >process of fetching and merging easier by providing a "Pull" button.
>
> Thanks for the explanation.  I had no idea there were two sets of things
> going on.  So after I figure out git I need to go figure out github.
>
> Carol
>
>


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Carlos Rovira
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