Learn Git in a Month of Lunches
Authors: Rick Umali
ISBN-10: 1617292419
ISBN-13: 9781617292415
Edition 版本: 1
Released: 2015-10-01
Print Length 页数: 376 pages
Book Description
Learn Git in a Month of Lunches introduces the discipline of source code control using Git. Whether you’re a newbie or a busy pro moving your source control to Git,you’ll appreciate how this book concentrates on the components of Git you’ll use every day. In easy-to-follow lessons designed to take an hour or less,you’ll dig into Git’s distributed collaboration model,along with core concepts like committing,branching,and merging.
Git is the source code control system preferred by modern development teams. Its decentralized architecture and lightning-fast branching let you concentrate on your code instead of tedious version control tasks. At first,Git may seem like a sprawling beast. Fortunately,to get started you just need to master a few essential techniques. Read on!
Learn Git in a Month of Lunches introduces the discipline of source code control using Git. Helpful for both newbies who have never used source control and busy pros,this book concentrates on the components of Git you’ll use every day. In easy-to-follow lessons that take an hour or less,you’ll dig into Git’s distributed collaboration model,along with core concepts like committing,branching,and merging. This book is a road map to the commands and processes you need to be instantly productive.
What’s Inside
Start from square one—no experience required
The most frequently used Git commands
Mental models that show how Git works
Learn when and how to branch code
contents
preface
about this book
acknowledgments
1Before you begin
2An overview of Git and version control
3 Getting oriented with Git
4Making and using a Git repository
5Using Git with a GUl
6Tracking and updating files in Git
7 Committing parts of changes
8 The time machine that is Git
9 Taking a fork in the road
10 Merging branches
11Cloning
12 Collaborating with remotes
13 Pushing your changes
14Keeping in sync
15Software archaeology
16Understanding git rebase
17 Workflows and branching conventions
18Working with GitHub
19 Third-party tools and Git
20Sharpening your Git