On Sat, May 04, 2024 at 09:11:12AM +0800, flow gg wrote: > I saw about comparing emails and gitlab/hub .., I did not comprehensively > understand their advantages and disadvantages, but I want to say that I > support it to change to gitlab/hub > > Simple reason: > > If you need to use git-send-email, I may not be able to submit any code > If you do not need to use git-send-email, it is troublesome for the > reviewer and the contributor > > In detail: > > I have tried git-send-email, but it failed. You can say that I am stupid, > but I would say that this is because of various reasons such as my area and > the network. It is really not what I can solve. > Maybe I will spend a lot of energy trying it in the future, but this is > because I have submitted thousands of lines of code. I don't want to give > up. If it is from the beginning, it will cause abandonment. if anyone needs to install get-send-email see: https://git-send-email.io/ if you cannot use get-send-email. (misconfigured corporate firewalls?, north korea?) you can create patches using git format-patch to turn the last 2 commits into patches git format-patch -2 then attach the created files to your mail or 2 mails, or just copy and paste them inline into mails. Make sure your mail client doesnt do word wraping or other whitespace "cleanup" Thats all there is to it. get-send-email is recommanded (because its very easy normally) but git will work perfectly fine without it > > Maybe I am younger here in FFMPEG. I have a lot of good young people around > me. They all use github/lab by default, and there will be the same problem > as me, resulting in abandonment. if our guides about how to submit patches are bad, our guides need to be fixed. thx [...] -- Michael GnuPG fingerprint: 9FF2128B147EF6730BADF133611EC787040B0FAB Asymptotically faster algorithms should always be preferred if you have asymptotical amounts of data