+[2020-07-05T20:24:20Z]oprypinIntelo, u just create an organization +[2020-07-05T21:39:48Z]mukmukremoved by githubs garbage collection, or should i message the support to get it completely removed? +[2020-07-05T21:39:48Z]mukmukhey guys, i've made a commit on my fork accidentally using my real name + company email instead of the nickname and private mail. the commit message refs an issue on the upstream repo, where it automatically created a cross reference to that commit. i've force deleted the branch and the commit in it, but the reference is still there. will this get +[2020-07-05T22:42:51Z]oprypini'd also be interested in the answer for curiosity +[2020-07-05T23:26:34Z]oprypinactually that's not right, sometimes i intentionally link to a commit of mine without intending to keep it in a branch
i'd also be interested in the answer for curiosity
+[2020-07-06T11:48:52Z]juanonymousWhat's a github.io page? Is it for github devs +[2020-07-06T11:51:58Z]jhassjuanonymous: https://pages.github.com/ +[2020-07-06T12:08:30Z]juanonymousThanks +[2020-07-06T14:22:06Z]FakuVeHi guys , I'm often seeing config files and .md documents that I would like to have them in my own repository. I'm quite new in Github and I see forking is not doing what I expected. It is a good practice to download such a file and then push it myself to my repository? or are there other ways? Thanks +[2020-07-06T14:23:14Z]nedbatFakuVe: there isn't a way to share one file from another repo. but copying a .md document sounds like maybe the wrong thing to do also.