Forking with the Edit Button
You’ve been able to edit files in repositories you own on GitHub for years. But today, we’ve improved the workflow for this functionality. You can now edit files in repositories…
You’ve been able to edit files in repositories you own on GitHub for years. But today, we’ve improved the workflow for this functionality. You can now edit files in repositories that you don’t have write access to!
If you browse to a file on GitHub in someone else’s repository and want to suggest a change, you can click the new ‘Fork and edit file’ button:
This will let you change the file. If you don’t have a fork of the project already, it will fork it for you in the background. When you are done with your edit, we will write your change into your new fork automatically and send you to the pull request page so you can tell the owner of the repository.
If you would like to try it yourself, go ahead and add something to this file.
This makes it so you can make a change to any visible file and send it to the project owner in mere seconds. Happy collaborating!
Written by
Related posts
GitHub Availability Report: September 2024
In September, we experienced three incidents that resulted in degraded performance across GitHub services.
Code referencing now generally available in GitHub Copilot and with Microsoft Azure AI
Announcing the general availability of code referencing in GitHub Copilot and Microsoft Azure AI, allowing developers to permit code suggestions containing public code matches while receiving detailed information about the match.
The nuances and challenges of moderating a code collaboration platform
Sharing the latest data update to our Transparency Center alongside a new research article on what makes moderating a code collaboration platform unique.