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Fix blockquote. Having the blockquote broken into pieces is an annoying and confusing experience, especially with screen readers
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This question has an answer at Stack Overflow by nulltoken.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

 

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

 

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

 
  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50
 

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

 

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

Just code your own whatever if youryou are better at it and have a fix or a change.. githubGitHub is opensourceopen source. codeCode on githubGitHub is free to change obviously..

This question has an answer at Stack Overflow.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

 

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

 

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

 
  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50
 

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

 

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

Just code your own whatever if your better at it and have a fix or a change.. github is opensource. code on github is free to change obviously..

This question has an answer at Stack Overflow by nulltoken.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

Just code your own if you are better at it and have a fix or a change. GitHub is open source. Code on GitHub is free to change obviously.

This question has an answer at Stack Overflow.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

Jesus tits... justJust code your own whatever if your better at it and have a fix or a change.. github is opensource. code on github is free to change obviously..

This question has an answer at Stack Overflow.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

Jesus tits... just code your own whatever if your better at it and have a fix or a change.. github is opensource. code on github is free to change obviously..

This question has an answer at Stack Overflow.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

Just code your own whatever if your better at it and have a fix or a change.. github is opensource. code on github is free to change obviously..

This guy is just crying! Hes been given several solutions that are all available via past posts. clearly.
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This question has an answer at Stack Overflow.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

Jesus tits... just code your own whatever if your better at it and have a fix or a change.. github is opensource. code on github is free to change obviously..

This question has an answer at Stack Overflow.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

This question has an answer at Stack Overflow.

Although GitHub removed the private messaging feature, there's still an alternative.

GitHub host git repositories. If the user you're willing to communicate with has ever committed some code, there are good chances you may reach your goal. Indeed, within each commit is stored some information about the author of the change or the one who accepted it.

Provided you're really dying to exchange with user user_test

  • Display the public activity page of the user:
    https://github.com/user_test?tab=activity
  • Search for an event stating "user_test pushed to [branch] at [repository]". There are usually good chances, he may have pushed one of his own commits. Ensure this is the case by clicking on the "View comparison..." link and make sure the user is listed as one of the
    committers.
  • Clone on your local machine the repository he pushed to: git clone https://github.com/..../repository.git
  • Go to that directory cd repository
  • Checkout the branch he pushed to: git checkout [branch]
  • Display the latest commits: git log -50

As a committer/author, an email should be displayed along with the commit data.

Note: Every warning related to unsolicited email should apply there. Do not spam.

Jesus tits... just code your own whatever if your better at it and have a fix or a change.. github is opensource. code on github is free to change obviously..

replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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