A simple Git cheat sheet for the basic commands and working with a git repo, in our case Github.

To start, you can always use git help to see a basic list of commands.

Git Terminology: master default branch we develop in origin default upstream repo (Github) HEAD current branch remote repository stored on another computer staging (adding) adding changed files to index tree to be committed Here's a good glossary of definitions.

Starting a Repo init/clone/remote

git init Create a repo from existing data git clone (repo_url) Clone a current repo (into a folder with same name as repo) git clone (repo_url) (folder_name) Clone a repo into a specific folder name git clone (repo_url) . Clone a repo into current directory (should be an empty directory) git remote add origin https://github.com/username/(repo_name).git Create a remote repo named origin pointing at your Github repo (after you've already created the repo on Github) (used if you git init since the repo you created locally isn't linked to a remote repo yet) git remote add origin git@github.com:username/(repo_name).git Create a remote repo named origin pointing at your Github repo (using SSH url instead of HTTP url) git remote Show the names of the remote repositories you've set up git remote -v Show the names and URLs of the remote repositories git remote rm (remote_name) Remove a remote repository git remote set-url origin (git_url) Change the URL of the git repo git push Push your changes to the origin

Showing Changes status/diff/log/blame

git status Show the files changed git diff Show changes to files compared to last commit git diff (filename) Show changes in single file compared to last commit git diff (commit_id) Show changes between two different commits. git log Show history of changes git blame (filename) Show who changed each line of a file and when

Commit ID: This can be that giant long SHA-1 hash. You can call it many different ways. I usually just use the first 4 characters of the hash.

Undoing Changes reset/revert

git reset --hard Go back to the last commit (will not delete new unstaged files) git revert HEAD Undo/revert last commit AND create a new commit git revert (commit_id) Undo/revert a specific commit AND create a new commit

Staging Files add/rm

git add -A Stage all files (new, modified, and deleted) git add . Stage new and modified files (not deleted) git add -u Stage modified and deleted files (not new) git rm (filename) Remove a file and untrack it git rm (filename) --cached Untrack a file only. It will still exist. Usually you will add this file to .gitignore after rm

Git Workflow Trees: How adding and committing moves files between the different git trees. Working Tree The "tree" that holds all our current files. Index (after adding/staging file) The "staging" area that holds files that need to be committed. HEAD Tree that represents the last commit. How adding and committing moves files between the different git trees.

Publishing commit/stash/push

git commit -m "message" Commit the local changes that were staged git commit -am "message" Stage files (modified and deleted, not new) and commit git stash Take the uncommitted work (modified tracked files and staged changes) and saves it git stash list Show list of stashes git stash apply Reapply the latest stashed contents git stash apply (stash_id) Reapply a specific stash. (stash id = stash@{2}) git stash drop (stash_id) Drop a specific stash git push Push your changes to the origin git push origin (local_branch_name) Push a branch to the origin git tag (tag_name) Tag a version (ie v1.0). Useful for Github releases.

Updating and Getting Code fetch/pull

git fetch Get the latest changes from origin (don't merge) git pull Get the latest changes from origin AND merge git checkout -b (new_branch_name) origin/(branch_name) Get a remote branch from origin into a local branch (naming the branch and switching to it)

Branching branch/checkout

git branch Show all branches (local) git branch -a Show all branches (local and remote) git branch (branch_name) Create a branch from HEAD git checkout -b (branch_name) Create a new branch and switch to it git checkout (branch_name) Switch to an already created branch git push origin (branch_name) Push a branch up to the origin (Github) git checkout -b (new_branch_name) origin/(branch_name) Get a remote branch from origin into a local branch (naming the branch and switching to it) git push origin --delete (branch_name) Delete a branch locally and remotely

Integrating Branches merge/rebase

git checkout master

git merge (branch_name) Merge a specific branch into the master branch. git rebase (branch_name) Take all the changes in one branch and replay them on another. Usually used in a feature branch. Rebase the master to the feature branch so you are testing your feature on the latest main code base. Then merge to the master. git cherry-pick (commit_id) Merge just one specific commit from another branch to your current branch.

Merging: Merging will occur FROM the branch you name TO the branch you are currently in. Rebasing: Usually switch to a feature branch ( git checkout newFeature ). Then rebase ( git rebase master ). Then merge back so you have all the changes of master and the feature branch ( git checkout master , and git merge newFeature ).

There you go! Hopefully that covers most of the basic ones and a few more. If you'd like to see any that haven't been covered here, I'd be happy to add them. Also if you need a further explanation or demonstration, don't be scared to ask. Happy gitting!

Cheat Sheet as a Chrome Extension

Interested in having this cheat sheet available in your Chrome browser for easy access? themergency has created this great Chrome extension!

Download it and enjoy.

Edit #1: Added rebase, cherry-pick, stash, rm Edit #2: Added Chrome Extension by themergency

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