2. [30 second howto](#30-second-howto)
3. [Overview](#overview)
4. [Getting Started](#getting-started)
-5. [Usage](#usage)
+5. [Usage Exmaples](#usage-examples)
6. [Contact](#contact)
vcsh vim commit -m 'Initial commit of my Vim configuration'
# optionally push your files to a remote
vcsh vim remote add origin <remote>
- vcsh vim push origin master:master
- vcsh vim branch --track master origin/master
+ vcsh vim push -u origin master
+ # from now on you can push additional commits like this
+ vcsh vim push
If all that looks a _lot_ like standard `git`, that's no coincidence; it's
a design feature.
~ % mr -j 5 up
-# Usage
+# Usage Examples
+
+All examples in this section will use the short form of `vcsh` which is the
+simplest way to interface with it. If you don't know what that means simply
+ignore this fact for now and follow the examples.
+
+## Initialize a new repository "vim"
+
+ vcsh init vim
+
+## Clone an existing repository
+
+ vcsh clone <remote> <repository_name>
+
+## Add files to repository "vim"
+
+ vcsh vim add ~/.vimrc ~/.vim
+ vcsh vim commit -m 'Update Vim configuration'
+
+## Add a remote for repository "vim"
+
+ vcsh vim remote add origin <remote>
+ vcsh vim push origin master:master
+ vcsh vim branch --track master origin/master
+
+## Push to remote of repository "vim"
+
+ vcsh vim push
+
+## Pull from remote of repository "vim"
+
+ vcsh vim pull
+
+
+# mr usage ; will be factored out & rewritten
### Keeping repositories Up-to-Date
to use mr, in which case you will have to run those commands manually or by
other means.
-#### A Few Examples
To initialize a new repository: `vcsh init zsh`