One of the things that helped me a lot when learning git was figuring out
how to fix my mistakes. Like how to rest --hard to a point before I screwed
everything up, or reset to origin/master.
Not something I have to do much now but it gave me a lot of confidence to
know I could pretty easily undo
I've found people often struggle with when and how to rebase in various
forms. It could probably use a good portion of time.
On Tue, Dec 1, 2015 at 11:38 AM, Louis Kowolowski
wrote:
>
> > On Nov 30, 2015, at 10:56 PM, Michael Dexter
> wrote:
> >
> > On 11/30/15 10:52 PM, Ali Corbin wrote:
> >>
> On Nov 30, 2015, at 10:56 PM, Michael Dexter wrote:
>
> On 11/30/15 10:52 PM, Ali Corbin wrote:
>> I don't think I could come up with anything very organized, but I've used
>> git and github for years and could probably babble on about them.
>>
>> But maybe everyone already groks git and just
On 11/30/15 10:52 PM, Ali Corbin wrote:
> I don't think I could come up with anything very organized, but I've used
> git and github for years and could probably babble on about them.
>
> But maybe everyone already groks git and just wants to get up to speed on
> github? The only thing it really a
On Nov 30, 2015 10:20 PM, "Michael Dexter" wrote:
>
>
> Hello all,
>
> Thank you to the person who gave me a suggestion for a possible speaker
> for a Git/GitHub crash course. I am trying to reach them.
>
> Are there any card-carrying members who would like to give such a crash
> course this Thurs
Hello all,
Thank you to the person who gave me a suggestion for a possible speaker
for a Git/GitHub crash course. I am trying to reach them.
Are there any card-carrying members who would like to give such a crash
course this Thursday? Alan and Randal have covered the topic in the past
but tha