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@ -21,8 +21,6 @@ |
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\tikzstyle{branch} = [ellipse, text centered, text=green] |
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\tikzstyle{branch} = [ellipse, text centered, text=green] |
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\tikzstyle{arrow} = [thick, <-, draw=blue] |
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\tikzstyle{arrow} = [thick, <-, draw=blue] |
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\usepackage{dirtree} |
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\usepackage{dirtree} |
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\usepackage{csquotes} |
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\usepackage{csquotes} |
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%\usepackage{gitdags} |
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%\usepackage{gitdags} |
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@ -87,7 +85,6 @@ |
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} |
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} |
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} |
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} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{What is Git} |
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\frametitle{What is Git} |
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@ -100,9 +97,9 @@ |
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\end{itemize} |
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\end{itemize} |
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\note{% |
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\note{% |
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Git is still being developed. |
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Being distributed means you can work on repositories offline (Unlike SVN). |
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It keeps track by maintaining a series of snapshots containing all of the files and folders |
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at each point. |
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It's useful even if you're working on things by your self. This presentation is version |
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It's useful even if you're working on things by your self. This presentation is version |
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controlled. |
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controlled. |
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@ -110,6 +107,8 @@ |
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You can use it to find out when something broke. I won't be covering it today but there is a |
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You can use it to find out when something broke. I won't be covering it today but there is a |
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tool called git bisect that can take a unit test (or script) to analyse when something broke |
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tool called git bisect that can take a unit test (or script) to analyse when something broke |
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using a binary search. |
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using a binary search. |
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Being distributed means you can work on repositories offline (Unlike SVN). |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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@ -128,115 +127,6 @@ |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame}[fragile] |
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\frametitle{Install} |
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\begin{minted}{bash} |
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# Ubuntu / Debian / Kali |
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sudo apt install git |
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# Centos / Fedora / Red Hat |
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sudo dnf install git |
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# Arch / Antergos / Manjaro |
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sudo pacman -S git |
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# Mac |
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brew install git |
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# Get the Version |
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git --version |
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\end{minted} |
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Git for Windows: \href{https://gitforwindows.org/}{https://gitforwindows.org/} |
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\note{% |
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Git is probably already installed if you are on a Linux system. However, if not, it will |
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definitely be in your standard repositories. |
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There is a version of Git provided with xcode, but it is old. Most of the stuff we cover |
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today should still work but (for example) some things need to be run from the root directory |
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in old versions of git that don't in newer versions. |
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If you have the misfortune to be using windows, I've heard good things about Git for Windows |
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but have not used it personally. It includes Bash emulation. |
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Hopefully you have a version greater than 2.23.0 - if not, it's not the end of the world. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame}[fragile] |
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\frametitle{Setting It Up} |
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\framesubtitle{User} |
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\begin{minted}{bash} |
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git config --global user.name "Jonathan Hodgson" |
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git config --global user.email "git@jonathanh.co.uk" |
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\end{minted} |
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\note{% |
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Hopefully you have Git installed. I will be running it on Linux although the commands should |
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all be the same for Windows and Mac. |
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Note that I am not using my primary email address. The email address you provide here will |
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be available to anyone with access to repositories you work on. |
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These settings are stored in \mintinline{bash}{~/.gitconfig}. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame}[fragile] |
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\frametitle{Setting It Up} |
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\framesubtitle{Editor} |
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\textbf{Pick One} |
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\begin{minted}{bash} |
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# Set editor to vim |
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git config --global core.editor "vim" |
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# Set editor to nano |
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git config --global core.editor "nano" |
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# Set editor to VS Code |
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git config --global core.editor "code -w" |
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# Set editor to Sublime |
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git config --global core.editor "subl -w" |
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\end{minted} |
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\note{% |
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There are several times that Git will need to open a text editor. By default, it will use |
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\mintinline{bash}{EDITOR}. If neither is set, it will use VI. |
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Note that if you are using a GUI editor, you might have to set the wait flag. This makes it |
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so the executable doesn't return until you close it. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Terminology} |
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\framesubtitle{Objects} |
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\textbf{Blob} In Git, a file is called a blob. |
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\textbf{Tree} In Git, a directory is called a tree. |
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\textbf{Commit} A snapshot of your code |
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% All of these are referenced by a hash and stored in the \mintinline{bash}{.git/objects/} |
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% directory. |
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\note{% |
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Technically, a blob is kind of like an inode on the file system so also represents symbolic |
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links. |
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There are some other types such as submodules but I won't be addressing them in this |
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presentation. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Naïve Approach} |
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\frametitle{Naïve Approach} |
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\begin{columns} |
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\begin{columns} |
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@ -266,22 +156,43 @@ |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item Difficult to collaborate |
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\item Difficult to collaborate |
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\item Lot's of wasted disk space |
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\item Lot's of wasted disk space |
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\item Can be difficult to work out chronological order |
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\item Hard to find particular versions of files |
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\end{itemize} |
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\end{itemize} |
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\end{column} |
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\end{column} |
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\end{columns} |
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\end{columns} |
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\note{% |
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\note{% |
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There are many approaches you could take to version control |
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I think, being honest, we have all done this. This sort of works, if you're working on |
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I think, being honest, we have all done this. This sort of works, if you're working on |
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something by yourself. Once you start collaborating on software, you are going to have a bad |
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something by yourself. Once you start collaborating on software, you are going to have a bad |
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time. |
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time. |
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However, this is a simple approach and not a million miles from what Git does internally. |
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You could add time stamps and zip up changes when you need to collaborate. |
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Git has a well thought out model that allows us to address these problems. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Files and Folders} |
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\textbf{Blob} In Git, a file is called a blob. |
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\textbf{Tree} In Git, a directory is called a tree. |
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\note{% |
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Git needs a way of modeling files and folders in a file system independent way. |
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These concepts are pretty familiar. A tree can contain other trees or blobs. |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Improve it} |
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\frametitle{Commits} |
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\framesubtitle{(Snapshots)} |
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\begin{center} |
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\begin{center} |
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\begin{tikzpicture} |
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\begin{tikzpicture} |
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%\draw (-1.5,-1.5) rectangle (7.5,1.5); |
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%\draw (-1.5,-1.5) rectangle (7.5,1.5); |
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@ -298,11 +209,9 @@ |
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\end{center} |
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\end{center} |
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\note{% |
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\note{% |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item This is a simple representation of the folder structure we saw. |
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\item We could then think of history as a linear series of snapshots. |
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\item Notice that so the computer knows the order, somewhere in each ``snapshot", we |
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\item Each circle here represents a snapshot. |
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include a reference to the previous snapshot. |
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\item The previous snapshot is referenced somewhere in each snapshot. |
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\item This is stored along side other metadata such as a timestamp and the person |
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taking the snapshot. |
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\item We then just need to record the most recent version somewhere. |
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\item We then just need to record the most recent version somewhere. |
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\end{itemize} |
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\end{itemize} |
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} |
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} |
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@ -339,6 +248,115 @@ |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Staging Area} |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item Sometimes called the git index |
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\item An intermediate area in which you can pick files to be included in the next commit. |
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\item Also allows you to exclude some files from your version history. |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item Log files |
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\item Binary files |
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\item Minified files |
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\end{itemize} |
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\end{itemize} |
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\note{% |
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This is the last thing before we start actually doing stuff (promise). |
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This is particularly useful if you have multiple logically unrelated changes and want to |
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make separate snapshots for each. |
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Also useful if when programming you write your tests along side your code, you would |
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normally want those to be separate snapshots. |
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We will talk about .gitignore later which is another way of ignoring files |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame}[fragile] |
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\frametitle{Install} |
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\begin{minted}{bash} |
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# Ubuntu / Debian / Kali |
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sudo apt install git |
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# Centos / Fedora / Red Hat |
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sudo dnf install git |
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# Arch / Antergos / Manjaro |
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|
sudo pacman -S git |
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# Mac |
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brew install git |
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# Get the Version |
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git --version |
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\end{minted} |
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Git for Windows: \href{https://gitforwindows.org/}{https://gitforwindows.org/} |
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\note{% |
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Git is probably already installed if you are on a Linux system. However, if not, it will |
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definitely be in your standard repositories. |
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There is a version of Git provided with xcode, but it is old. Most of the stuff we cover |
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today should still work but (for example) some things need to be run from the root directory |
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in old versions of git that don't in newer versions. |
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If you have the misfortune to be using windows, I've heard good things about Git for Windows |
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but have not used it personally. It includes Bash emulation. |
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Hopefully you have a version greater than 2.23.0 - if not, it's not the end of the world. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame}[fragile] |
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\frametitle{Setting It Up} |
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\framesubtitle{User} |
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\begin{minted}{bash} |
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git config --global user.name "Jonathan Hodgson" |
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git config --global user.email "git@jonathanh.co.uk" |
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\end{minted} |
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\note{% |
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Hopefully you have Git installed. I will be running it on Linux although the commands should |
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all be the same for Windows and Mac. |
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Note that I am not using my primary email address. The email address you provide here will |
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be available to anyone with access to repositories you work on. |
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These settings are stored in \mintinline{bash}{~/.gitconfig}. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame}[fragile] |
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\frametitle{Setting It Up} |
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\framesubtitle{Editor} |
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\textbf{Pick One} |
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\begin{minted}{bash} |
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# Set editor to vim |
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git config --global core.editor "vim" |
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# Set editor to nano |
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git config --global core.editor "nano" |
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# Set editor to VS Code |
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git config --global core.editor "code -w" |
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# Set editor to Sublime |
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git config --global core.editor "subl -w" |
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\end{minted} |
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\note{% |
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There are several times that Git will need to open a text editor. By default, it will use |
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\mintinline{bash}{EDITOR}. If neither is set, it will use VI. |
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Note that if you are using a GUI editor, you might have to set the wait flag. This makes it |
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so the executable doesn't return until you close it. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Create a repository} |
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\frametitle{Create a repository} |
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@ -377,14 +395,6 @@ |
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git add -A |
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git add -A |
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\end{minted} |
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\end{minted} |
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\note{% |
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\note{% |
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The staging area is where you put things that you want to be committed. |
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It can often be useful to manually split changes up into different commits. You might be |
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working on feature A and feature B simultaneously. It is good practice to have each feature |
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as a separate commit so you could add feature A to the staging area, commit it, then do the |
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same for feature B. |
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We will talk about \mintinline{bash}{.gitignore} in a bit. |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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@ -401,11 +411,8 @@ |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame}[fragile] |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Committing} |
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\frametitle{Committing} |
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\begin{minted}{bash} |
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git commit |
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\end{minted} |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item First line should be concise summary around 50 chars |
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\item First line should be concise summary around 50 chars |
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@ -1008,6 +1015,52 @@ |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Issues} |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item Not part of Git, rather something most Git hosting providers offer. |
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\item You can normally reference issues in commit messages using \# symbol. |
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\end{itemize} |
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\note{% |
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Demonstrate this in a browser using Github |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Pull Requests} |
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\framesubtitle{Merge Requests} |
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\begin{enumerate} |
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\item Fork |
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\item Clone |
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\item Branch |
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\item Commit |
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\item Push |
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\end{enumerate} |
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\note{% |
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\begin{itemize} |
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\item Not part of Git, rather something most Git hosting providers offer. |
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\item It allows for people to contribute code to repositories that they don't have |
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write access to |
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\end{itemize} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\framesubtitle{Shell Integration} |
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Git ships with completion for bash, zsh and tcsh. You may need to source it in the relevant rc |
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file. |
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Prompt customisation is available out of the box for bash and zsh. |
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\note{% |
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If you haven't ever tried zsh, give it a shot. Tab completion is so much more useful than |
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Bash's. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\framesubtitle{Bat} |
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\framesubtitle{Bat} |
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@ -1045,18 +1098,6 @@ |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\framesubtitle{Delta} |
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\begin{center} |
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\includegraphics[width=\textwidth,height=0.6\textheight,keepaspectratio]{auto-download-aHR0cHM6Ly91c2VyLWltYWdlcy5naXRodWJ1c2VyY29udGVudC5jb20vNTIyMDUvNjUyNDg1MjUtMzIyNTA0ODAtZGFlYS0xMWU5LTk5NjUtMWEwNWM2YTRiZGY0LnBuZw==.png} |
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\end{center} |
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\href{https://github.com/dandavison/delta}{https://github.com/dandavison/delta} |
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\note{% |
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This is a tool that can make your diff output look better. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\framesubtitle{BFG Repo Cleaner} |
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\framesubtitle{BFG Repo Cleaner} |
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@ -1070,19 +1111,6 @@ |
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} |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\framesubtitle{Shell Integration} |
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Git ships with completion for bash, zsh and tcsh. You may need to source it in the relevant rc |
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file. |
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Prompt customisation is available out of the box for bash and zsh. |
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\note{% |
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If you haven't ever tried zsh, give it a shot. Tab completion is so much more useful than |
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Bash's. |
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} |
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\end{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\begin{frame} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\frametitle{Useful supporting tools} |
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\framesubtitle{Pass} |
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\framesubtitle{Pass} |
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