We’re introducing an easier, more seamless way to work with GitHub from the command line -GitHub CLI (now in beta). Millions of developers rely on GitHub to make building software more fun and collaborative, and to bring the ghGitHub terminal to your experience.

You can install the GitHub CLI on macOS, Windows, and Linux right away, and more features will be available as we refine our beta feedback.

The installation method is as follows:

https://cli.github.com/

How do you use the GitHub CLI?

We start with questions and make requests, because many developers use them every day. Check out some examples of how GH can help you improve your experience as you contribute to open source projects, and learn more from the manual.

Filter by your list of issues

Find the open source projects you want to contribute to and clone the repository. Then, to see where the maintainer wants the community to contribute, use the GH filter criteria to show only questions tagged with help.

Quickly view the detailed issue

Find the problem that describes the bug that might seem fixable, and then use the gh problem to quickly open it up in your browser to get all the details you need to get started.

Create a pr

Create a branch, make a few commits to fix the errors described in the problem, and use the GH create request request to share your contributions.

By using the GitHub CLI to create pull requests, it can also automatically create a derivation when you don’t have branches, push branches and create pull requests to merge your changes.

Check your working status

Take a quick look at what happens the next morning after the request request is created. Gh displays the review and check status of your pull request.

Easily detect PR

A maintainer reviews your PR and requests changes. Since then, you may have switched branches, so gh can be used to check out the pull request branch. We don’t remember the right commands either!

Make the change, push it, and merge the merge request request. Congratulations!

Help shape the GitHub CLI

We hope you’ll enjoy the foundation we’ve built through pull requests and questions. We’re even more excited about the future as we explore building truly enjoyable experiences on GitHub via the command line. As GitHub CLI continues to contribute to projects on GitHub and becomes more seamless, there is no limit to what we can achieve together.

We can’t wait to hear about your experiences with the GitHub CLI, and we’d love to provide you with feedback. Create questions in our open source repository or provide feedback in Google forms. What command line is unacceptable to you? Or do you have any better suggestions? Let us know so we can make GitHub CLI better.

Learn more about GitHub CLI Beta

https://cli.github.com/

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This article is published by OpenWrite!