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1.2 Git Cheat Sheet
Majd Khalife edited this page Aug 31, 2024
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git init
: Create a new Git repository in the current directory.
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git clone <repository_url>
: Clone a remote repository to your local machine.
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git status
: Show the status of your working directory. -
git log
: Displays a chronological list of commits, including their messages and unique identifiers.
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git add <file>
: Stage a changed file for commit. -
git add -A
: Stage all changes.
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git commit -m "Commit message"
: Create a new commit with staged changes.
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git branch
: List all branches. -
git branch -d <branch_name>
: Delete a local branch that has been merged. -
git branch -r
: List all remote branches -
git branch <branch_name>
: Create a new branch. -
git checkout <branch_name>
: Switch to a different branch. -
git checkout -b <branch_name>
: Create and switch to a new branch.
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git merge <branch_name>
: Merge changes from one branch into the current branch.
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git reset <file>
: Unstage changes. -
git reset --soft <commit>
: Reset to a previous commit, keeping changes staged. -
git reset --hard <commit>
: Reset to a previous commit, discarding all changes. -
git revert <commit>
: Create a new commit that undoes a previous commit.
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git fetch --prune
: Fetch changes from a remote and remove deleted branches from your local.
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git diff <branch_name>
: Show changes between your current branch and another branch.
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git push origin <branch_name>
: Push a new branch to a remote repository.
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git pull
: Fetch and merge commits from the remote, only applies to the branch you are currently on. -
git push
: Push commits made locally to the remote, so they can be seen by others on the same branch.
- The
.gitignore
file is used to specify files and directories to be ignored in commits.