Github For Mac Publish

Setup

Github publish website

GitHub CLI gh is GitHub on the command line. It brings pull requests, issues, and other GitHub concepts to the terminal next to where you are already working with git and your code. It is also possible to use SSH to connect to Git. To attempt to publish the app to Git, select the repository, and ensure that both Module Name and Message text fields are completed: Click Okay, and then Publish from the alert dialog. In the Git Credentials window, enter your GitHub.

Install Github Mac

Publish

Github Mac Desktop

Github awesome macGithub For Mac Publish

Github Publish Website

GitHub Extension for Visual Studio

The GitHub Extension for Visual Studio makes it easy to connect to and work with your repositories on GitHub and GitHub Enterprise from directly within Visual Studio 2015 or newer. Clone existing repositories or create new ones and start collaborating!

For more information about the extension, visit https://visualstudio.github.com/.

For feedback and bug reports, please email support@github.com.

Features

  1. Connect - From the Team Explorer section, click the Connect... button in the GitHub invitation section to login to the extension. The extension supports two-factor authentication (2fa) with GitHub and stores credentials in the Windows Credential store so that Git Operations within Visual Studio work with your GitHub repositories. The extension also supports logging into a GitHub Enterprise instance.
  2. Clone - Once connected, click on the Clone button to list all repositories that you have access to on GitHub.
  3. Create - The create dialog lets you create a repository on GitHub.com and locally that are connected together.
  4. Publish - For a local-only repository, click on the Sync navigation item to get the GitHub publish control. This make it quick to publish your local work up to GitHub.
  5. Open in Visual Studio - once you log-in with the extension, GitHub.com will show a new button next to repositories labeled 'Open in VisualStudio.' Click on the button to clone the repository to Visual Studio.
  6. Create Gist - Create gists by using the GitHub context menu when you right-click on selected text
  7. Open/Link to GitHub - Easily open on GitHub or share a link to the code you're working on by using the GitHub context menu.
  8. Pull Requests - View your repository's Pull Requests and create new ones from the Pull Requests button in the Team Explorer Home
  9. See Pull Request diffs - See all Pull Request changes as individual diff views and open changed files directly from the Pull Request details view
  10. Review Pull Requests - Start a review and submit a review that comments, approves, or request changes to the Pull Request
  11. Inline Comments - Add review comments to the Pull Request changes you're reviewing directly from the VS diff view
  12. Fork - From Team Explorer Home, fork a repository you have already cloned.

Requirements

Visual Studio 2015 and above