Using `ownerAffiliations` instead of `affiliations` seems more semantically correct to list all repos belonging to a user or an organization, but the latter thas an added benefit that it also works around a problem when the API would return an error if the user happens to belong to an organization that has IP allow list enabled.
From our GraphQL docs:
> `affiliations`: Array of viewer's affiliation options for repositories returned from the connection. For example, OWNER will include only repositories that the current viewer owns.
>
> `ownerAffiliations`: Array of owner's affiliation options for repositories returned from the connection. For example, OWNER will include only repositories that the organization or user being viewed owns.
A new GitHub feature landed where the API client can specify the desired
name of the new fork. This avoids the necessity of subsequently having
to rename the forked repo after the fork operation has created one.
For backwards compatibility, the renaming logic is still here, but
activates only if the resulting repo name is not the desired name.
The `Visibility` field will be empty for `search` results when made
against GHES versions < 3.3. If that is the case, fall back to
constructing the label using `IsPrivate` field.
We used to do the equivalent of `rootCmd.SetOut(os.Stdout)` because we
thought that Cobra's "Out" stream represents standard output. However,
upon closer inspection it turns out that this is Cobra's stream for
usage errors and deprecation warnings, and those we want written to
stderr as well. It is not clear to me why Cobra maintains a distinction
between "Out" and "Err" streams since both seem to go to sdterr by
default.
This change also ceases our usage of `command.Print()` functions in
favor of explicitly writing to `IOStreams.Out/ErrOut`.
* Use plural linking verb
While it looks like you could use "there's" informally, grammatically, it should be "are" since "commits" is plural.
<https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/grammar/british-grammar/there-is-there-s-and-there-are>
* Omit "the"
I created a remote called "github" and got this prompt:
> Would you like to push commits from the current branch to the "github"?
Normally, the default name "origin" doesn't sound bad in that prompt,
but using the name "github" made the prompt sound like something wasn't
right to my American English-speaking ears.
Here are a few options. Yes, I know English grammar sucks, to put it
mildly. But, hopefully, the following options and explanations make
sense.
Get rid of "the". This is the option I went with. "github" acts as a
proper noun, so no determiner is needed. If you substitute your own
name for "github" in the original prompt above, you get the same effect:
> Would you like to push commits from the current branch to "github"?
Add the implicit word "remote". "github" now acts as an adjective and
"the" refers to "remote":
> Would you like to push commits from the current branch to the "github" remote?
Or, combine the two. This last option relies on the fact that
instructions and manuals often omit definite articles because most
articles are definite. See the [zero-marking][2] article on Wikipedia.
The original prompt already does this by omitting "the" before the word
"commits":
> Would you like to push commits from the current branch to "github" remote?
Reference:
[1]: http://writing.umn.edu/sws/quickhelp/grammar/articlesproper.html
[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-marking_in_English