![]() ![]() Participate in the LEGO Microgame challenge to win cool things.WebSocket is a communication protocol which provides a full-duplex and low-latency channel between the server and the browser. We are also using the LEGO Microgame to test this all out and have some fun. If want to watch these recordings then check out the first and second streams on Unity game dev. Guaranteed fun times, learning, and lots of great networking. If you want to join in on these streams, follow me on Twitch and tune in when we go live. I had a lot of fun learning about this and really excited to see some more open source projects as we stream. ![]() This might take a while depending on how big the repo is.Īt this stage they are still on your local machine. Git commit -m #add your commit message in here Make sure you then finalise the commit by adding the commit message: Lots of changes will happen, and colours. means that you're all all the files in your local directory. Then add all the files to your local git: Otherwise you'll get permission denied errors. Also, make sure you have Unity closed in order to do the above step. If this doesn't work for you, then run your terminal as admin. It will look like nothing happens, but all the names changed. Now we need to change all the long file names: Next you need to navigate to your local git folder:Ĭd #add your file location for your local project here Plus it gives you a list of useful commands to get you started. This command will tell you whether the CLI is installed, as well as information about what version you have. Make sure you have the GitHub CLI installed: Here’s the commands we discovered to help you commit your Unity files to GitHub. So what do you do to get all these long file names onto GitHub? Use the command line. If you want all your files in one place then this isn’t really an option. gitignore, which means you specifically identify files for git to ignore or rather not bother committing them to your repo. ![]() GitHub Command Line for uploading long Unity files I totally forgot (or rather didn’t really know how) the command line allows you to make lots of changes all at once. Being able to clone, fork, create repos and more from the terminal makes life a lot easier. I’ve been doing a lot of work using the GitHub CLI and it’s been amazing. That’s when one of my viewers (remember I am streaming while I’m learning) chimed in and said I should use the command line. ![]()
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