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authorApoorv Choubey <theapoorvs1@gmail.com>2018-10-20 21:11:17 +0530
committerApoorv Choubey <theapoorvs1@gmail.com>2018-10-20 21:11:17 +0530
commit2af4f99b67ceffe2be741a2acf6bb51dd26dc931 (patch)
tree1f36d1f468516ca894b54c8b0938bcde0a0151cc /git.html.markdown
parent9e2bd7c11bcfce42007c962eb8a9fbbeeb6f12e2 (diff)
add Git resource
Diffstat (limited to 'git.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r--git.html.markdown60
1 files changed, 31 insertions, 29 deletions
diff --git a/git.html.markdown b/git.html.markdown
index 582f8863..aa96c90a 100644
--- a/git.html.markdown
+++ b/git.html.markdown
@@ -26,11 +26,11 @@ Version control is a system that records changes to a file(s), over time.
### Centralized Versioning vs. Distributed Versioning
-* Centralized version control focuses on synchronizing, tracking, and backing
+* Centralized version control focuses on synchronizing, tracking, and backing
up files.
-* Distributed version control focuses on sharing changes. Every change has a
+* Distributed version control focuses on sharing changes. Every change has a
unique id.
-* Distributed systems have no defined structure. You could easily have a SVN
+* Distributed systems have no defined structure. You could easily have a SVN
style, centralized system, with git.
[Additional Information](http://git-scm.com/book/en/Getting-Started-About-Version-Control)
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ A git repository is comprised of the .git directory & working tree.
### .git Directory (component of repository)
-The .git directory contains all the configurations, logs, branches, HEAD, and
+The .git directory contains all the configurations, logs, branches, HEAD, and
more.
[Detailed List.](http://gitready.com/advanced/2009/03/23/whats-inside-your-git-directory.html)
@@ -68,15 +68,15 @@ referred to as your working directory.
### Index (component of .git dir)
-The Index is the staging area in git. It's basically a layer that separates
-your working tree from the Git repository. This gives developers more power
+The Index is the staging area in git. It's basically a layer that separates
+your working tree from the Git repository. This gives developers more power
over what gets sent to the Git repository.
### Commit
-A git commit is a snapshot of a set of changes, or manipulations to your
-Working Tree. For example, if you added 5 files, and removed 2 others, these
-changes will be contained in a commit (or snapshot). This commit can then be
+A git commit is a snapshot of a set of changes, or manipulations to your
+Working Tree. For example, if you added 5 files, and removed 2 others, these
+changes will be contained in a commit (or snapshot). This commit can then be
pushed to other repositories, or not!
### Branch
@@ -91,13 +91,13 @@ functionality to mark release points (v1.0, and so on)
### HEAD and head (component of .git dir)
-HEAD is a pointer that points to the current branch. A repository only has 1
-*active* HEAD.
-head is a pointer that points to any commit. A repository can have any number
+HEAD is a pointer that points to the current branch. A repository only has 1
+*active* HEAD.
+head is a pointer that points to any commit. A repository can have any number
of heads.
### Stages of Git
-* Modified - Changes have been made to a file but file has not been committed
+* Modified - Changes have been made to a file but file has not been committed
to Git Database yet
* Staged - Marks a modified file to go into your next commit snapshot
* Committed - Files have been committed to the Git Database
@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ to Git Database yet
### init
-Create an empty Git repository. The Git repository's settings, stored
+Create an empty Git repository. The Git repository's settings, stored
information, and more is stored in a directory (a folder) named ".git".
```bash
@@ -179,7 +179,7 @@ $ git help status
### add
-To add files to the staging area/index. If you do not `git add` new files to
+To add files to the staging area/index. If you do not `git add` new files to
the staging area/index, they will not be included in commits!
```bash
@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ working directory/repo.
### branch
-Manage your branches. You can view, edit, create, delete branches using this
+Manage your branches. You can view, edit, create, delete branches using this
command.
```bash
@@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ $ git push origin --tags
### checkout
-Updates all files in the working tree to match the version in the index, or
+Updates all files in the working tree to match the version in the index, or
specified tree.
```bash
@@ -269,7 +269,7 @@ $ git checkout -b newBranch
### clone
Clones, or copies, an existing repository into a new directory. It also adds
-remote-tracking branches for each branch in the cloned repo, which allows you
+remote-tracking branches for each branch in the cloned repo, which allows you
to push to a remote branch.
```bash
@@ -285,7 +285,7 @@ $ git clone -b master-cn https://github.com/adambard/learnxinyminutes-docs.git -
### commit
-Stores the current contents of the index in a new "commit." This commit
+Stores the current contents of the index in a new "commit." This commit
contains the changes made and a message created by the user.
```bash
@@ -401,11 +401,11 @@ Pulls from a repository and merges it with another branch.
$ git pull origin master
# By default, git pull will update your current branch
-# by merging in new changes from its remote-tracking branch
+# by merging in new changes from its remote-tracking branch
$ git pull
# Merge in changes from remote branch and rebase
-# branch commits onto your local repo, like: "git fetch <remote> <branch>, git
+# branch commits onto your local repo, like: "git fetch <remote> <branch>, git
# rebase <remote>/<branch>"
$ git pull origin master --rebase
```
@@ -421,7 +421,7 @@ Push and merge changes from a branch to a remote & branch.
$ git push origin master
# By default, git push will push and merge changes from
-# the current branch to its remote-tracking branch
+# the current branch to its remote-tracking branch
$ git push
# To link up current local branch with a remote branch, add -u flag:
@@ -432,7 +432,7 @@ $ git push
### stash
-Stashing takes the dirty state of your working directory and saves it on a
+Stashing takes the dirty state of your working directory and saves it on a
stack of unfinished changes that you can reapply at any time.
Let's say you've been doing some work in your git repo, but you want to pull
@@ -464,7 +464,7 @@ nothing to commit, working directory clean
```
You can see what "hunks" you've stashed so far using `git stash list`.
-Since the "hunks" are stored in a Last-In-First-Out stack, our most recent
+Since the "hunks" are stored in a Last-In-First-Out stack, our most recent
change will be at top.
```bash
@@ -495,7 +495,7 @@ Now you're ready to get back to work on your stuff!
### rebase (caution)
-Take all changes that were committed on one branch, and replay them onto
+Take all changes that were committed on one branch, and replay them onto
another branch.
*Do not rebase commits that you have pushed to a public repo*.
@@ -510,7 +510,7 @@ $ git rebase master experimentBranch
### reset (caution)
Reset the current HEAD to the specified state. This allows you to undo merges,
-pulls, commits, adds, and more. It's a great command but also dangerous if you
+pulls, commits, adds, and more. It's a great command but also dangerous if you
don't know what you are doing.
```bash
@@ -535,7 +535,7 @@ $ git reset --hard 31f2bb1
Reflog will list most of the git commands you have done for a given time period,
default 90 days.
-This give you the chance to reverse any git commands that have gone wrong
+This give you the chance to reverse any git commands that have gone wrong
(for instance, if a rebase has broken your application).
You can do this:
@@ -558,8 +558,8 @@ ed8ddf2 HEAD@{4}: rebase -i (pick): pythonstatcomp spanish translation (#1748)
### revert
-Revert can be used to undo a commit. It should not be confused with reset which
-restores the state of a project to a previous point. Revert will add a new
+Revert can be used to undo a commit. It should not be confused with reset which
+restores the state of a project to a previous point. Revert will add a new
commit which is the inverse of the specified commit, thus reverting it.
```bash
@@ -604,3 +604,5 @@ $ git rm /pather/to/the/file/HelloWorld.c
* [Pro Git](http://www.git-scm.com/book/en/v2)
* [An introduction to Git and GitHub for Beginners (Tutorial)](http://product.hubspot.com/blog/git-and-github-tutorial-for-beginners)
+
+* [The New Boston tutorial to Git covering basic commands and workflow](https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6gx4Cwl9DGAKWClAD_iKpNC0bGHxGhcx)