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  2. Merge (version control) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merge_(version_control)

    Manual merging is also required when automatic merging runs into a change conflict; for instance, very few automatic merge tools can merge two changes to the same line of code (say, one that changes a function name, and another that adds a comment). In these cases, revision control systems resort to the user to specify the intended merge result.

  3. Comparison of file comparison tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_file...

    Merge Structured comparison [b] Manual compare alignment Image compare Beyond Compare: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes (Files and Folders) Yes (Pro only) Yes Yes Compare++: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes (C/C++,C#,Java,Javascript,CSS3) diff: No Yes partly No No No diff3: No No Yes (non-optional) Eclipse (compare) Yes No (only ancestor) Yes No Ediff: Yes Yes Yes Yes ...

  4. Timeline of GitHub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_GitHub

    GitHub releases version 1.0 of its Atom text editor. [125] [126] 25 July: Financial: GitHub announces it has raised $250 million in funding in a round led by Sequoia Capital. The round valued the company at approximately $2 billion. [1] [127] 12 August: Product: GitHub launches a desktop client for working with the site, for macOS and Microsoft ...

  5. Duff's device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duff's_device

    In the C programming language, Duff's device is a way of manually implementing loop unrolling by interleaving two syntactic constructs of C: the do-while loop and a switch statement. Its discovery is credited to Tom Duff in November 1983, when Duff was working for Lucasfilm and used it to speed up a real-time animation program.

  6. SquashFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SquashFS

    github.com /plougher /squashfs-tools Squashfs is a compressed read-only file system for Linux . Squashfs compresses files , inodes and directories , and supports block sizes from 4 KiB up to 1 MiB for greater compression.

  7. Version control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Version_control

    Version control (also known as revision control, source control, and source code management) is the software engineering practice of controlling, organizing, and tracking different versions in history of computer files; primarily source code text files, but generally any type of file.

  8. Distributed version control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_version_control

    The contributor requests that the project maintainer pull the source code change, hence the name "pull request". The maintainer has to merge the pull request if the contribution should become part of the source base. [12] The developer creates a pull request to notify maintainers of a new change; a comment thread is associated with each pull ...

  9. Program slicing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Program_slicing

    At first, slicing was only static, i.e., applied on the source code with no other information than the source code. Bogdan Korel and Janusz Laski introduced dynamic slicing, which works on a specific execution of the program (for a given execution trace). [1] Other forms of slicing exist, for instance path slicing. [2]