![]() It has a download for releases/tags it needs a download for branches, and it would be nice for commits, too. And, of course, add them to the app’s UI. It seems an easy fix is to tweak the small view UI to have those buttons. ![]() So, the only reason mobile users can’t do the download feature, and the fork, is because their web page’s fluid UI is designed to not show those UI components on small screens, and their app doesn’t support downloading a branch or forking a repo. Simply the larger view size shows the needed links in the page so they can be used to download the repo or fork it. It should, but some designers there decided they didn’t want to allow that on mobile, which is a design flaw.Ī friend of mine helped me out with this using her iPad. The small “mobile” size doesn’t show the usual download links or the fork button. Their web design uses a fluid design which changes based on the view size. It cannot hotspot to other devices to share that internet.Īnd, the only reason I can’t download a repo is because GitHub’s UI design prevents it in both their web pages and their iOS app. So, the answer to your question is: my desktop, and all my other devices, do not have internet access. Please note I wrote “I hear you, why not download on my iMac ? I don’t have ‘home internet’. JFYI, I’m looking to download repo munificent/craftinginterpreters to play around with language creation.īeta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback. I think there is in a desktop sized browser view, so, …Īnyway, for those of us relying on mobile only access some changes would nice, including the missing fork button (both browser and mobile app). It seems like there should be a standard “download this repo” link in the browser version but I don’t see one. Publish it to your github, by clicking the publish button. Open GitHub Desktop, and add your new repo by browsing it to your unzipped local path new repo. Open your own project repo from browser, and download as a zip, eg your-project-master.zip. I use my phone’s data.įor a repo with its own release/tag I can at least get a link to that, but, it’s not the most current, so, if I wanted to grab the newest code… What you need is just a GitHub Desktop application. I hear you, why not download on my iMac ? I don’t have “home internet”. Transfer that file from my iPhone to iMac via direct cable.Go to the releases/tags to download the project zip/tgz file.Click Fork to create my own fork of the repo.Visit someone else’s repo via web browser or GitHub iOS app.I can’t get the Fork button to show in any mobile browser.
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