I am involved in a project on github that is not mine. Nevertheless, my team added me to the project as author.

On Careers 2.0, I am only able to add project I created (so within my "namespace"), or project of other I forked.

I don't know how far you track users and their project, but I think it could be fair to be able to link on team project where the user is author but not owner.

share|improve this question
2  
Do you get an error message? Or what happens when you try to do this? – Cody Gray Aug 11 '11 at 13:38
No it is just not in the list of "addable" project. – M'vy Aug 11 '11 at 13:56
Can you send me a link to the project? We do support Github organizations. – Matt Sherman Aug 11 '11 at 14:21
@Matt the project is here. github.com/prologin/prolojail But I'm not sure the account is an "organisation" account. Pretty much like StackExchange scripts of @Rebecca github.com/rchern/StackExchangeScripts . Multiple people are able to commit and push on the project, but @Rebecca owns the repository. – M'vy Aug 11 '11 at 14:42
1  
Thanks. The Github API (v2) is surprisingly roundabout for this sort of thing. We’ll investigate v3… – Matt Sherman Aug 17 '11 at 17:37
It should even be possible to add projects where you don’t have any commit rights at all – you might have made substantial contributions anyway. Unfortunately, the manual adding mode does not help either. – Adrian Lang Sep 20 '11 at 9:26

1 Answer

the short answer is that we haven't figured out a good way to do this with the Github API. It's a common request, we'll announce if/when we figure it out.

share|improve this answer
1  
can't one rely (at least in part) on the goodwill of people that will edit their resumé and let them manually add the appropriate repositories? – rbrito Mar 27 at 22:41

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged