+ [2015-10-23T20:59:21Z] VxJasonxV I think the answer is yes, but I'm not sure I completely understand.
+ [2015-10-23T20:59:33Z] RedRat__ Yes, I can :3
+ [2015-10-23T20:59:49Z] RedRat__ you can set by title=title and body=text as query string
+ [2015-10-23T20:59:51Z] RedRat__ thanks again
+ [2015-10-23T21:00:01Z] VxJasonxV ohhhh, that thing. yeah

message no. 117388

Posted by rrva in #github at 2015-10-23T09:18:12Z

githubbers: ^ both those help with larger repos. Please consider them. In the meantime I think I will use https://visibilityspots.org/github-mirroring.html to create a read-only mirror which supports this
+ [2015-10-24T01:53:25Z] Nanashi Help. I did git mv (folder)/size.speed.asm (folder)/6.6.asm and edited 6.6.asm but GitHub for Windows glitches: http://i.imgur.com/S9Qfbnf.png
+ [2015-10-24T01:55:18Z] Nanashi The changelist looks like I added an entirely new file and deleted the original (actually shows empty instead of line removal). I get an error when trying to commit.
+ [2015-10-24T01:57:01Z] Nanashi It would let me rename and edit separately, but I don't want to do that.
+ [2015-10-24T02:18:51Z] Nanashi nevermind, whatever
+ [2015-10-24T03:45:50Z] gitinfo Nanashi: git does not support explicitly file renaming - the 'git mv' command is shorthand for 'git rm --cached; mv; git add'. All "rename" statistics are generated at runtime when examining history with git-log. See the -M option in the git-log manpage for more info. Also http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/27/focus=217 and `diff.renames = true` in man git-config