News
Go to your GitHub account and create a new repository with a README.md file. Let’s name this repo merge-conflict-demo.
At this point, the repository has one README.md file (a markdown file to store essential project information) and one commit, the initial commit that GitHub automatically creates when you add a ...
It doesn't pick and choose; you get the whole lot. You'll also get the README.md file which is used to create any text and instructions on the front page of the repo.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results