This is probably embarrassing but I'm sharing anyway: I learned a GitHub fork is basically just a branch. I've always re-forked other people's repos to work on them again. Turns out, you can just rebase in your existing fork like on your own local repos:
Done! None of these steps are new concepts for me, at all, I just never put two and two together in this context somehow. I would imagine pretty much everyone does it this way instead of the caveman-like nonsense I was up to before. Thanks, StackOverflow. Never leave me.
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
This is probably embarrassing but I'm sharing anyway: I learned a GitHub fork is basically just a branch. I've always re-forked other people's repos to work on them again. Turns out, you can just
rebase
in your existing fork like on your own local repos:Done! None of these steps are new concepts for me, at all, I just never put two and two together in this context somehow. I would imagine pretty much everyone does it this way instead of the caveman-like nonsense I was up to before. Thanks, StackOverflow. Never leave me.