Let’s say a repo named cool-stuff
is on github.
I have a fork of cool-stuff
and I have submitted a PR associated with my fork of cool-stuff
which is waiting to be merged.
Now, there is another independent fork of cool-stuff
,say, even-cooler-stuff
which works on new features to introduce to cool-stuff
. I would like to contribute to the even-cooler-stuff
repo but github won’t let me since I already have a fork of cool-stuff
.
Is there any way to do what I want like this or should I manually tell the author of even-cooler-stuff
the changes I want to do?
fkn@lemmy.world 1 year ago
You can add the even-cooler-stuff as another remote repo(like origin) and grab those changes and branch off of one of is branches then you can make pull requests to even cooler stuff from those branches.
stackoverflow.com/…/how-do-i-update-or-sync-a-for…
spez@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
So, if I understand correctly,you mean :
even-cooler-stuff
as remote.even-cooler-stuff
.now I should be able to make a pull request?
Lodra@programming.dev 1 year ago
Apparently, someone else posted the same solution that I did while I typed it out. Sorry for the duplicate but at least weagree on the solution! A warning on this one though. You want to use a feature branch too. Otherwise you’ll mix your changes for cool-stuff with new changes for and from even-cooler-stuff. It may become more confusing and difficult to merge.
fkn@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Everything else is the same.