From 2cf9baecfbd2d7163add07c81bfd5b8dd1f85706 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: karen Carias Date: Tue, 23 Jun 2015 11:20:20 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] added requested changes --- doc/gitlab_basics/create_your_ssh_keys.md | 11 ----------- 1 file changed, 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/gitlab_basics/create_your_ssh_keys.md b/doc/gitlab_basics/create_your_ssh_keys.md index 27c163b6704..14f69638700 100644 --- a/doc/gitlab_basics/create_your_ssh_keys.md +++ b/doc/gitlab_basics/create_your_ssh_keys.md @@ -34,14 +34,3 @@ You need to connect your computer to your GitLab account through SSH Keys. They ![Paste SSH Key](basicsimages/key.png) -## Things to know when using your commandline - -1. Don’t use capital letters. - -1. You need to find out how your directory is structured. The structure is like a tree, so you won’t be able to access one subfolder unless you open the main folder where it is contained. Directories are folders or files in your system. - -1. You can change multiple pages in one commit. A branch consists of multiple commits. - -1. The terminal will add changes locally in your computer, that you later need to send to gitlab.com. - -1. You can add changes directly into your computer files after you tell the terminal: “git pull NAME OF DOC”, and then you can send those changes to GitLab through the terminal (changes like adding files, changing names, adding pictures to files, etc).