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1. éå§
- 1.1 éę¼ēę¬ę§å¶
- 1.2 Git ēē°”å²
- 1.3 Git åŗē¤č¦é»
- 1.4 å½ä»¤å
- 1.5 Git å®č£ęåø
- 1.6 åꬔčØå® Git
- 1.7 åå¾čŖŖęęä»¶
- 1.8 ęč¦
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2. Git åŗē¤
- 2.1 åå¾äøå Git åå²
- 2.2 ē“éč®ę“å°ēę¬åŗ«äø
- 2.3 ęŖ¢č¦ęäŗ¤ēę·å²čØé
- 2.4 復å
- 2.5 čé 端ååå·„ä½
- 2.6 ęØē±¤
- 2.7 Git Aliases
- 2.8 ēø½ēµ
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3. ä½æēØ Git åęÆ
- 3.1 簔述åęÆ
- 3.2 åęÆååä½µēåŗę¬ēØę³
- 3.3 åęÆē®”ē
- 3.4 åęÆå·„ä½ęµēØ
- 3.5 é 端åęÆ
- 3.6 č”å
- 3.7 ēø½ēµ
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4. ä¼ŗęåØäøē Git
- 4.1 éčØåå®
- 4.2 åØä¼ŗęåØäøä½ē½² Git
- 4.3 ē¢ēä½ ē SSH å ¬é°
- 4.4 čØå®ä¼ŗęåØ
- 4.5 Git åøøé§ēØå¼
- 4.6 Smart HTTP
- 4.7 GitWeb
- 4.8 GitLab
- 4.9 第3ę¹ Git čØē®”ę¹ę”
- 4.10 ēø½ēµ
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5. åę£å¼ē Git
- 5.1 åę£å¼å·„ä½ęµēØ
- 5.2 å°å°ę”é²č”č²¢ē»
- 5.3 ē¶č·äøåå°ę”
- 5.4 Summary
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6. GitHub
- 6.1 建ē«åø³ę¶åčØå®
- 6.2 åčäøåå°ę”
- 6.3 ē¶č·å°ę”
- 6.4 Managing an organization
- 6.5 Scripting GitHub
- 6.6 ēø½ēµ
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7. Git å·„å ·
- 7.1 Revision Selection
- 7.2 Interactive Staging
- 7.3 Stashing and Cleaning
- 7.4 Signing Your Work
- 7.5 Searching
- 7.6 Rewriting History
- 7.7 Reset Demystified
- 7.8 Advanced Merging
- 7.9 Rerere
- 7.10 Debugging with Git
- 7.11 Submodules
- 7.12 Bundling
- 7.13 Replace
- 7.14 Credential Storage
- 7.15 ēø½ēµ
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8. Customizing Git
- 8.1 Git Configuration
- 8.2 Git Attributes
- 8.3 Git Hooks
- 8.4 An Example Git-Enforced Policy
- 8.5 Summary
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9. Git and Other Systems
- 9.1 Git as a Client
- 9.2 Migrating to Git
- 9.3 Summary
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10. Git Internals
- 10.1 Plumbing and Porcelain
- 10.2 Git Objects
- 10.3 Git References
- 10.4 Packfiles
- 10.5 The Refspec
- 10.6 Transfer Protocols
- 10.7 Maintenance and Data Recovery
- 10.8 Environment Variables
- 10.9 Summary
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A1. éé A: Git in Other Environments
- A1.1 Graphical Interfaces
- A1.2 Git in Visual Studio
- A1.3 Git in Eclipse
- A1.4 Git in Bash
- A1.5 Git in Zsh
- A1.6 Git in Powershell
- A1.7 Summary
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A2. éé B: Embedding Git in your Applications
- A2.1 Command-line Git
- A2.2 Libgit2
- A2.3 JGit
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A3. éé C: Git Commands
- A3.1 Setup and Config
- A3.2 Getting and Creating Projects
- A3.3 Basic Snapshotting
- A3.4 Branching and Merging
- A3.5 Sharing and Updating Projects
- A3.6 Inspection and Comparison
- A3.7 Debugging
- A3.8 Patching
- A3.9 Email
- A3.10 External Systems
- A3.11 Administration
- A3.12 Plumbing Commands
A3.6 éé C: Git Commands - Inspection and Comparison
Inspection and Comparison
git show
The git show
command can show a Git object in a simple and human readable way.
Normally you would use this to show the information about a tag or a commit.
We first use it to show annotated tag information in ę註解ēęØē±¤.
Later we use it quite a bit in Revision Selection to show the commits that our various revision selections resolve to.
One of the more interesting things we do with git show
is in Manual File Re-merging to extract specific file contents of various stages during a merge conflict.
git shortlog
The git shortlog
command is used to summarize the output of git log
.
It will take many of the same options that the git log
command will but instead of listing out all of the commits it will present a summary of the commits grouped by author.
We showed how to use it to create a nice changelog in ē°”ēēę„čŖ.
git describe
The git describe
command is used to take anything that resolves to a commit and produces a string that is somewhat human-readable and will not change.
Itās a way to get a description of a commit that is as unambiguous as a commit SHA-1 but more understandable.
We use git describe
in ē¢ēäøå建置編č and ęŗåéåŗäøåēę¬ to get a string to name our release file after.