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README.md
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README.md
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**TODO**: Delete these instructions before you submit your work.
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## Instructions
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1. Read Chapters 2 & 3 of [Pro Git][ProGit]. The chapters are short.
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2. Answer these questions using [Markdown format][markdown-cheatsheet] (also [Github Markdown][github-markdown]).
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3. Place your answers between lines beginning with 3 backquotes, which tells Markdown it should be unformatted text, and write only the commands you would type (**no** shell prompt). E.g.:
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```
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git status CORRECT
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$ git status WRONG - you do not type "$"
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```
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4. Indent the 3 backquotes so they line up with the question text (3 leading spaces) so Markdown formats you answer as part of the numbered item.
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Example:
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```
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git init
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```
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5. **Test that your answers are correct!** There is **no excuse** for incorrect answers since you can test your answers by experimentation.
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6. Verify that your Markdown formatting is correct -- points deducted for bad formatting. VS Code and IntelliJ have markdown previewers. You should also preview it on Github, since Github Markdown is a bit non-standard.
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**TODO**: Delete these instructions before you submit your work. Points deducted for each "TODO" in this file.
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## Using Git
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[Basics](#basics)
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[Adding and Changing Things](#adding-and-changing-things)
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[Undo Changes and Recover Files](#undo-changes-and-recover-files)
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[Viewing Commits](#viewing-commits)
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[Branch and Merge](#branch-and-merge)
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[Commands for Remotes](remote-commands.md)
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[Favorites](#favorites)
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[Resources](#resources)
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#### Note on Paths
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In this file, directory paths are written with a forward slash as on MacOS, Linux, and the Windows-Bash shell: `/dir1/dir2/somefile`.
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## Basics
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1. When using Git locally, what are these? Define each one in a sentence
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* Staging area -
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* Working copy -
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* master -
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* HEAD -
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2. When you install git on a new machine (or in a new user account) you should perform these 2 git commands to tell git your name and email. These values are used in commits that you make:
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```
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# Git configuration commands for a new account
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```
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3. There are 2 ways to create a local Git repository. Briefly descibe each one:
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- todo: describe first way to create a local repo
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- todo: describe second way to create a local repo
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## Adding and Changing Things
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Suppose your working copy of a repository contains these files and directories:
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```
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README.md
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out/
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a.exe
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src/a.py
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b.py
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c.py
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test/
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test_a.py
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...
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```
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> TODO: Write the git command to perform each of these:
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1. Add README.md and *everything* in the `src` directory to the git staging area.
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```
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todo your answer here
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```
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2. Add `test/test_a.py` to the staging area (but not any other files).
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```
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todo your answer
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```
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3. List the names of files in the staging area.
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```
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todo your answer
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```
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4. Remove `README.md` from the staging area. This is **very useful** if you accidentally add something you don't want to commit.
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```
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todo your answer
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```
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5. Commit everything in the staging area to the repository.
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```
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todo your answer
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```
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6. In any project, there are some files and directories that you **should not** commit to git.
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For a Python project, name *at least* files or directories that you should not commit to git:
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-
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-
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-
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7. Command to move all the .py files from the `src` dir to the top-level directory of this repository. This command moves them in your working copy *and* in the git repo (when you commit the change):
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```
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```
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8. In this repository, create your own `.gitignore` file that you can reuse in other Python projects. Add everything that you think is relevant.
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*Hint:* A good place to start is to create a new repo on Github and during the creation dialog, ask Github to make a .gitignore for Python projects. Then edit it. Don't forget to include pytest output and MacOS junk.
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## Undo Changes and Recover Files
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> TODO: enter the git command to do each of these
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> For questions where you are showing a command, use triple-backquote marks (as above) so the text is formatted as code.
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1. Display the differences between your *working copy* of `a.py` and the `a.py` in the *local repository* (HEAD revision):
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2. Display the differences between your *working copy* of `a.py` and the version in the *staging area*. (But, if a.py is not in the staging area this will compare working copy to HEAD revision):
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3. **View changes to be committed:** Display the differences between files in the staging area and the versions in the repository. (You can also specify a file name to compare just one file.)
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4. **Undo "git add":** If `main.py` has been added to the staging area (`git add main.py`), remove it from the staging area:
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5. **Recover a file:** Command to replace your working copy of `a.py` with the most recent (HEAD) version in the repository. This also works if you have deleted your working copy of this file.
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6. **Undo a commit:** Suppose you want to discard some commit(s) and move both HEAD and "master" to an earlier revision (an earlier commit) Suppose the git commit graph looks like this (`aaaa`, etc, are the commit ids)
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```
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aaaa ---> bbbb ---> cccc ---> dddd [HEAD -> master]
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```
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The command to reset HEAD and master to the commit id `bbbb`:
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7. **Checkout old code:** Using the above example, the command to replace your working copy with the files from commit with id `aaaa`:
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```
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todo your answer here
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```
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Note:
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- Git won't let you do this if you have uncommitted changes to any "tracked" files.
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- Untracked files are ignored, so after doing this command they will still be in your working copy.
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## Viewing Commits
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1. Show the history of commits, using one line per commit:
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```
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git log --oneline
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```
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Some versions of git have an *alias* "log1" for this (`git log1`).
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2. Show the history (as above) including *all* branches in the repository and include a graph connecting the commits:
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```
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```
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3. List all the files in the current branch of the repository:
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```
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todo your answer
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```
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Example output:
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```
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.gitignore
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README.md
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a.py
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b.py
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test/test_a.py
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test/test_b.py
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```
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## Branch and Merge
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**TODO**: This section is free-form. Create 4 numbered items for common branch-and-merge tasks you would like to remember and show the git command to do each one. (You are write *more* than 4 if you want.)
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## Favorites
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> TODO: Describe *at least* 1 task that you would like to remember, and the git command(s) to do it.
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---
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## Resources
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> TODO: Add your favorite Git resources (at least 1)
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* [Pro Git Online Book][ProGit] Chapters 2 & 3 contain the essentials. Downloadable e-book is available, too.
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* [Visual Git Reference](https://marklodato.github.io/visual-git-guide) one page with illustrations of git commands.
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* [Markdown Cheatsheet][markdown-cheatsheet] summary of Markdown commands.
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* [Github Markdown][github-markdown] some differences in the way Github handles markdown and special Markdown for repos.
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Learn Git Visually:
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* [Learn Git Interactive Tutorial][LearnGitInteractive] great visual tutorial
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* [Git Visualizer][VisualizeGit] execute Git commands in a web browser and see the results as a graph.
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[ProGit]: https://www.git-scm.com/book/en/v2 "Pro Git online book on Git-scm.com"
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[ProGitPdf]: https://progit2.s3.amazonaws.com/en/2016-03-22-f3531/progit-en.1084.pdf "Pro Git v.2 PDF on AWS. Longer, book format."
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[LearnGitInteractive]: https://learngitbranching.js.org "Interactive graphical git tutorial"
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[VisualizeGit]: http://git-school.github.io/visualizing-git/ "Online tools draws a graph of commits in a repo as you type"
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[markdown-cheatsheet]: https://github.com/adam-p/markdown-here/wiki/Markdown-Cheatsheet
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[github-markdown]: https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/writing-on-github/getting-started-with-writing-and-formatting-on-github/basic-writing-and-formatting-syntax
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remote-commands.md
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51
remote-commands.md
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## Commands for Remotes
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> TODO Write your answers and then remove **all** the TODO comments
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```
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1. List all your remote repositories and show their URLs:
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```
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Todo write the git command for this
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```
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2. View details about a remote repo named `origin`, including all the remote branches and local tracking branches for `origin`:
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```
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Todo write the git command for this
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```
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3. (Pushing a new branch) You commit some files to the `dev-foo` branch and try to "push" them to Github, but it fails as shown here:
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```
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cmd> git checkout dev-foo
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cmd> git push
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fatal: The current branch dev-foo has no upstream branch.
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```
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Explain this error.
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> TODO Since you are writing an explanation (not shell commands), write your answer in lines beginning with `>` like this one. The text will be formatted and may include Markdown.
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4. The command to push `dev-foo` to `origin` as a **new remote branch** on `origin` is:
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5. (Create a local tracking branch for a remote branch) The remote repository (`origin`) has a branch named `e2e-test` that you don't have in your local repository.
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The command to create a new local branch as a copy of the remote `e2e-test` branch that **tracks** the remote branch is:
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```
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Todo There are many commands that will do this. You may write one or more than one.
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```
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6. The command to change the URL of the remote "origin" to a new URL, such as `https://hostname/newuser/new-repo-name`, is:
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```
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TODO your answer
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```
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This situation occurs when:
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- you change the name of a repo on Github
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- you transfer ownership of a Github repo to someone else
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- you move from Github to another hosting site, like Bitbucket
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- you want to switch from the https to the ssh protocol (the remote URL is different)
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8. To create a *second* remote repository for your local repo, the command to add a remote named "bitbucket" with the URL "https://bitbucket.org/your-username/git-commands" is:
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```
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todo your answer
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```
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- Note: you must **create** an empty repo on Bitbucket. This command just adds it as a remote, it won't create the remote repo.
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Reference in New Issue
Block a user