Message-ID: <20050927001542.GC15615@reactrix.com> From: Nick Hengeveld Date: Mon, 26 Sep 2005 17:15:42 -0700 Good point - use of environment variables is more consistent. Use of command-line arguments is a bit more convenient in my case since I'm driving the transfer from a perl script, but I suppose consistency is more important... Message-ID: <000a01c5c2fe$71fd6200$0200a8c0@AMEER> From: "Ameer Armaly" Date: Mon, 26 Sep 2005 20:57:33 -0400 I am seriously looking at putting one together in the D language (http://www.digitalmars.com/d) , though it doesn't actually do anything as of yet, since I have to balance classes along with it. Message-ID: <1127840572.16026.29.camel@mariano> From: Mariano Videla Date: Tue, 27 Sep 2005 14:02:51 -0300 I setup a git repository for gipy... Didn't upload any files in sourceforge because I don't think is ready. http://24.232.198.9:7978/gipy.git http://24.232.198.9:7978/cgi/gitweb.cgi Message-ID: <20050928113008.GA11309@snarc.org> From: tab@snarc.org (Vincent Hanquez) Date: Wed, 28 Sep 2005 13:30:08 +0200 Well, I kinda work on one written in C using a libgit (using exec of git executable for the moment) It doesn't do that much at the moment: commiting, adding files, removing files. At some point I'ld like to have a very integrated and easy to use porcelain, but for now that's more a learning git by practice kind of project. Message-ID: From: Matthias Urlichs Date: Wed, 28 Sep 2005 22:22:13 +0200 Python integration needs either lots of fork+exec, a git rewrite in Python, or a libgit reorganization in library-ized C. I'm doing the latter, but my free time is kindof limited for now. My library-ize branch is at git fetch http://netz.smurf.noris.de/git/git.git libize if anybody wants to have a look. My first goal is to get object access working sanely (because that's what I need for my Python project). I haven't merged up for some time, though.