hgbook
diff en/mq.tex @ 3:906d9021f9e5
Making progress on autogenerated example output.
author | Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat Jun 24 17:42:40 2006 -0700 (2006-06-24) |
parents | 379a802c0210 |
children | 33a2e7b9978d |
line diff
1.1 --- a/en/mq.tex Sat Jun 24 16:14:02 2006 -0700 1.2 +++ b/en/mq.tex Sat Jun 24 17:42:40 2006 -0700 1.3 @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ 1.4 1.5 The patch management problem arises in many situations. Probably the 1.6 most visible is that a user of an open source software project will 1.7 -contribute a bugfix or new feature to the project's maintainers in the 1.8 +contribute a bug fix or new feature to the project's maintainers in the 1.9 form of a patch. 1.10 1.11 Distributors of operating systems that include open source software 1.12 @@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ 1.13 patch will contain only one bug fix (the patch might modify several 1.14 files, but it's doing ``only one thing''), and you may have a number 1.15 of such patches for different bugs you need fixed and local changes 1.16 -you require. In this situation, if you submit a bugfix patch to the 1.17 +you require. In this situation, if you submit a bug fix patch to the 1.18 upstream maintainers of a package and they include your fix in a 1.19 subsequent release, you can simply drop that single patch when you're 1.20 updating to the newer release. 1.21 @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ 1.22 modifications those patches make. 1.23 1.24 Quilt knows nothing about revision control tools, so it works equally 1.25 -well on top of an unpacked tarball or a Suversion repository. 1.26 +well on top of an unpacked tarball or a Subversion repository. 1.27 1.28 \subsection{From patchwork quilt to Mercurial Queues} 1.29 \label{sec:mq:quilt-mq} 1.30 @@ -128,15 +128,19 @@ 1.31 \section{Getting started with Mercurial Queues} 1.32 \label{sec:mq:start} 1.33 1.34 -Because MQ is implemented as an extension, you have to explicitly 1.35 -enable it in order to use it. (You don't need to download anything; 1.36 -MQ ships with the standard Mercurial distribution.) To enable it, 1.37 -edit your \filename{~/.hgrc} file, and add the following lines: 1.38 +Because MQ is implemented as an extension, you must explicitly enable 1.39 +before you can use it. (You don't need to download anything; MQ ships 1.40 +with the standard Mercurial distribution.) To enable MQ, edit your 1.41 +\tildefile{.hgrc} file, and add the following lines: 1.42 1.43 -\begin{verbatim} 1.44 -[extensions] 1.45 -hgext.mq = 1.46 -\end{verbatim} 1.47 +\begin{codesample} 1.48 + [extensions] 1.49 + hgext.mq = 1.50 +\end{codesample} 1.51 + 1.52 +Once the extension is enabled, it will make a number of new commands 1.53 +available. 1.54 + 1.55 1.56 %%% Local Variables: 1.57 %%% mode: latex