Created
May 10, 2019 19:59
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Git/GitHub | |
Git is a version control system, a tool to manage all the different versions of your code. GitHub is an online hosting service for your git repositories. | |
When you start a project, you want to 1. create a file locally (in C9), 2. create a new repository in GitHub** 3. connect the two | |
That’s (mostly) it. | |
**Check out this 1-minute tutorial on how to create a new repo on GitHub: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LR5BYZjuXMU | |
When working with Git, commands to commit (pun intended!) to heart: | |
Open your project folder, and in the terminal, enter the following: | |
1. git init | |
a. you only need this command the very first time you commit a project. This is for the initial commit, that’s it. | |
2. git add . | |
a. don’t forget the period at the end of this command. | |
3. git commit –m “I made the following changes…” | |
a. What changed in this file? Commit messages might be something like: “added a method to reverse the string”; “changed the background color”; “added comments to the code”; | |
4. git remote add origin <add path> | |
You can get the path from the repository you made on github. It will look something like this: | |
[email protected]:RedSoxFan22/Saturday2.git | |
or | |
https://github.com/RedSoxFan22/Saturday2.git | |
5. git push origin master | |
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