Okay,  let's say each of my committed files is a chapter in a book, or each 
committed file is some piece of Perl code I'm writing. I want to see the 
actual HTML page or Perl code ready to use. 

I think my answer is that the actual files in the working directory are the 
ones I want to keep and use. I just pull them together say in HTML or Perl 
and away we go! I think I  assumed that, once committed, you threw away 
those files in the working directory. Wrong, right?

I really appreciate your help, Philip and Matt. It's hard to get away from 
the files-in-a-directory perspective! My fledgling tech-writing students at 
Austin Community College will appreciate this help too.

-- David
www.prismnet.com/~hcexres/

On Wednesday, December 22, 2021 at 9:38:18 AM UTC-6 [email protected] 
wrote:

> An interesting question, but maybe not quite as clear as to what is 
> desired. 
>
>
>    - Are you just looking for a print out of the files in the final 
>    commit - the finished project?
>    - Are you looking for a listing of all the commits (headline/subject) 
>    from the very beginning to the final commit?
>    - Are you looking for the commit messages as well that explain every 
>    step?
>    - With each of the diff's for each explained commits?
>
> Some of your answer will depend on how you managed the repos workflow, 
> such as having strong summary merge commits, or making sure that all the 
> temporary 'wip' commits had been rebased away. You may have had at least 
> some good tags that summarise major releases (relatively easy to list..).
>
> If it's just some formal summary document you need to tick a box for 
> quality control then it (the readable summary) doesn't need doing well ;-) 
>
> The main part will be to bundle whole repo and save that away as a 
> 'compressed attachment' which will allow the complete repo to be recreated. 
> You may need to prune the remote refs and temporary branches before using 
> --all to ensure you have the minimum of extraneous crud in the bundle 
> (--all gets all the crud refs and everything..)
>
>
> On Wednesday, December 22, 2021 at 3:05:25 PM UTC David McMurrey wrote:
>
>> I have  looked and looked to see how we can print out or display the 
>> contents of a local repo. I thought git-cat was the answer then git print 
>> origin. 
>>
>> When we have finished a git project, we need to display it as a regular 
>> document. How is that done?
>>
>> -- David
>>
>

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