+[2015-10-25T19:20:41Z]Nevikthe former is "when was this snapshot first added" and the latter is "when was this snapshot last edited" +[2015-10-25T19:21:18Z]Nevikrewriting actions are, for example, `git rebase`, `git commit --amend`, `git filter-branch`, and others +[2015-10-25T19:43:13Z]cluelesscoderNevik: ok, so the commit was probably originally May 4 and then edited on Sept 4 +[2015-10-25T21:06:56Z]MylonHow do I revert my fork back to being a clone of the master? 0 commits ahead/behind? I tried to use "git rebase -i" to delete some commits and it created more instead of less! +[2015-10-25T21:19:13Z]MylonI tried deleting my fork and then reforking, but it just restored my fork to how it was before.
If you just push any commit, even an empty one, to the gh-pages branch, it should
+[2015-10-26T00:13:17Z]MylonI made a branch dedicated to a pull request. If I make further changes to that branch, will it continue to add to the pull request I have already submitted? +[2015-10-26T00:16:57Z]Zarthusyes +[2015-10-26T00:17:12Z]Zarthusyou can create a new branch from the changes in that branch, though +[2015-10-26T08:11:22Z]WulfMorning +[2015-10-26T08:12:23Z]WulfIs there some way to link to a specific version of file? E.g. I want to link to current version of https://github.com/docker-library/mysql/blob/master/5.7/docker-entrypoint.sh and the link should always show the same file even if someone pushes something new