Post by Descolada » 12 Apr 2024, 12:05
@kunkel321, I use VSCode and there you need
1) navigate to the "Source Control" tab which houses the GitHub plugin
2) stage the files you want to commit by pressing the "+" icon next to the modified files
3) type in a commit message and press Commit
4) perhaps do some more commits if you want, or at this point you can also undo commits as they haven't been pushed to GitHub yet
5) either press "Sync Changes" which both pulls and pushes changes (might be undesirable at times to pull changes as well), or open the "More actions..." menu by pressing the three dots "..." next to SOURCE CONTROL and select Push. That actually pushes it to its repo, at which point you should also see it in GitHub
I'll make a pull request for you so you can test that out as well.
[mention]kunkel321[/mention], I use VSCode and there you need
1) navigate to the "Source Control" tab which houses the GitHub plugin
2) stage the files you want to commit by pressing the "+" icon next to the modified files
3) type in a commit message and press Commit
4) perhaps do some more commits if you want, or at this point you can also undo commits as they haven't been pushed to GitHub yet
5) either press "Sync Changes" which both pulls and pushes changes (might be undesirable at times to pull changes as well), or open the "More actions..." menu by pressing the three dots "..." next to SOURCE CONTROL and select Push. That actually pushes it to its repo, at which point you should also see it in GitHub
I'll make a pull request for you so you can test that out as well.