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  1. 5 hours ago

    We released version 9.2.2 of the extension for . It contains Mercurial 5.3 compatibility, fixes for python3 and various other bug fixes.

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  2. Feb 2

    Today, Raphaël Gomès is talking in the Rust devroom about the why and how of his work to interface it with Python.

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  3. Feb 1

    Here is the video for Raphaël's talk this morning about Boosting with :

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  4. Retweeted
    Feb 1

    Listening to Raphaël Gomès of at talking about: Boosting with The case of

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  5. Retweeted
    Feb 1

    devroom 💯 full and it's only the 2nd talk of the day 😅 Raphael Holes from talking about and

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  6. Feb 1

    Raphael is talking in the room about our usage of in and how it interface with .

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  7. Jan 31

    The Octobus team is on its way to We will talk about Heptapod (GitLab with Mercurial support) and our usage of Rust with Python within Mercurial (from both Python and Rust point of view)

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  8. Jan 8

    As you know we have been adapting to work with you favorite SCM. Today, we are happy to announce a parternship with to offer a official hosting service:

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  9. Retweeted

    If you are a user of and be sure to check out the announcement made about Heptapod, the friendly fork of gitlab with mercurial support. We use it at and we hope that you don't feel like you have to migrate to git.

    Heptapod as a BitBucket replacement
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  10. 18 Dec 2019
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  11. Retweeted
    25 Nov 2019

    Released 0.7.0rc1 today, featuring GitLab 10.3, Mercurial 5.2, and much more. Why a release candidate ? Because it felt right, even with testing of previous intermediate versions on 🐘octobus_net@framapiaf.org…

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  12. Retweeted
    24 Nov 2019

    finally fixed up PyQt5 type stubs for pytype to generate some meaningful messages.

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  13. Retweeted
    21 Nov 2019

    While I'm here, my official viewpoint is that LFS should be considered a temporary solution until version control tools gain features like partial clone which enable them to work with large files "natively." Unfortunately, Git's LFS implementation is a one-way door.

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  14. Retweeted
    21 Nov 2019

    These may seem like minor features. But they mean the difference between rewriting your repository's commit hashes when size becomes problematic and providing an effortless experience for management of large files in repositories.

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  15. Retweeted
    21 Nov 2019

    Mercurial's implementation of LFS - unlike Git's - does not change commit hashes: you can move files in and out of LFS as you see fit. Mercurial also allows you to automatically LFS'ify files larger than a size threshold, unlike Git, which forces you to list file [patterns].

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  16. Retweeted
    21 Nov 2019

    Well, I have what seems to be a working replacement for std::rc::Rc with transparent memory pooling, which should make quite a bit faster overall, and I'm just going to leave it there and write the tests in the morning so I can feel good about it tonight.

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  17. Retweeted
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  18. Retweeted
    31 Oct 2019

    Released 0.6.2 yesterday, still working on announcements while on my way to

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  19. Retweeted
    3 Nov 2019
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  20. Retweeted
    3 Nov 2019

    Un grand merci à tous nos bénévoles qui on permis d'organiser l'édition 2019 de la ! 🤗❤️

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