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way-of-git

The purpose of this repository is to give a good understanding of git using command line from basic to advance level concepts

Most Frequently Used Git Commands


git config

Usage: git config –global user.name “[name]”

Usage: git config –global user.email “[email address]”

This command sets the author name and email address respectively to be used with your commits.

git init

Usage: git init [repository name]

This command is used to start a new repository.

git clone

Usage: git clone [url]

This command is used to obtain a repository from an existing URL.

git status

Usage: git status

This command lists all the files to be committed.

git add

Usage: git add [file]

This command adds a file to the staging area.

Usage: git add *

This command adds one or more files to the staging area.

git commit

Usage: git commit -m “[commit message]”

This command records or snapshots the file permanently in the version history.

Usage: git commit -a

This command commits any files you’ve added with the git add command and also commits any files you’ve changed since then.

git reset

Usage: git reset [file]

This command unstages the file, but preserves the file contents.

Usage: git reset [commit]

This command undoes all the commits after the specified commit and preserves the changes locally.

Usage: git reset –hard [commit]

This command discards all history and goes back to the specified commit.

git rm

Usage: git rm [file]

This command deletes the file from your working directory and stages the deleted file.

git diff

Usage: git diff

This command shows the file differences which are not yet staged.

Usage: git diff –staged

This command shows the differences between the files in the staging area and the latest version present.

Usage: git diff [first branch] [second branch]

This command shows the differences between the two branches.

git branch

Usage: git branch

This command lists all the local branches in the current repository.

Usage: git branch [branch name]

This command creates a new branch.

Usage: git branch -d [branch name]

This command deletes the branch.

git checkout

Usage: git checkout [branch name]

This command is used to switch from one branch to another.

Usage: git checkout -b [branch name]

This command creates and switches to a new branch.

git merge

Usage: git merge [branch name]

This command merges the specified branch’s history into the current branch.

git remote

Usage: git remote add [variable name] [Remote Server Link]

This command is used to connect your local repository to the remote server.

git push

Usage: git push [variable name] [branch name]

This command sends the committed changes of your branch to your remote repository.

Usage: git push [variable name] [branch]

This command sends the branch commits to your remote repository.

Usage: git push –all [variable name]

This command pushes all branches to your remote repository.

Usage: git push [variable name] :[branch name]

This command deletes a branch on your remote repository.

git pull

Usage: git pull [Repository Link]

This command fetches and merges changes on the remote server to your working directory.

git stash

Usage: git stash save

This command temporarily stores all the modified tracked files.

Usage: git stash pop

This command restores the most recently stashed files.

Usage: git stash apply

This command restores and merge the most recently stashed files

Usage: git stash list

This command lists all stashed changes.

Usage: git stash drop

This command discards the most recently stashed changes.

git log

Usage: git log

This command lists the version history for the current branch.

Usage: git log –follow[file]

This command lists version history for a file, including the renaming files.

git show

Usage: git show [commit]

This command shows the metadata and content changes of the specified commit.

git tag

Usage: git tag [commitID]

This command is used to add tags to the specified commit.