diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'README')
-rw-r--r-- | README | 18 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 6 deletions
@@ -93,10 +93,14 @@ The body of a note is free-form. However, for clarity, it makes sense to avoid using '-' for lists in the body ('*' for the first level and '~' for the second level are good options). -Notes can be saved in two ways. Simple notes without a body or with a body +Notes can be saved in three ways. Simple notes without a body or with a body containing one or two paragraphs can be written in the list files. These files can appear at the top level or in any subdirectory. More complex notes can be -placed in their own files. +placed in their own files. Finally, notes that have addition material (what +traditional bug trackers would call "attachments") should be placed into their +own subdirectories with both the directory and the note file (inside that +subdirectory) having the same name. Other than that, such a subdirectory is +free form; it can contain other files and subdirectories. If a note is written in the list file, then its body must be indented two spaces to align with the start of the summary. Notes are separated with blank @@ -139,9 +143,10 @@ to bump at least the minor version. Note also that we can move notes freely between files. For example, we may add a new subdirectory and move all the notes that affect this functionality from -the top-level list file. Or we can move a note from list to its own file. For -example, if we start expanding on our "Implement pluggable formatter" idea, -then it probably makes sense to move it into its own file. +the top-level list file. Or we can move a note from list to its own file or +from a file to a subdirectory if we need to keep some additional files with the +note. For example, if we start expanding on our "Implement pluggable formatter" +idea, then it probably makes sense to move it into its own file. When committing (in the git sense) changes to the database, use a separate commit for each note. When committing a newly added note, the commit message @@ -157,7 +162,8 @@ If you only have a single issue added in the database then you can use the add script to automate it. This script will commit the new issues with the correct message and, unless the -c option is specified, push the result to origin. This should make filing new notes a fairly burdenless process: write a note using -your favorite text editor and run the add script. +your favorite text editor and run the add script. Note that the add script +currently cannot handle notes with extra files. Once a note is acted upon (implemented or you have decided not to do anything about it), you can either delete it or move it to the reference. Simply |