All the hidden and not hidden features of GitHub and Git. Taken from Zach Holman's talk at Aloha Ruby Conference 2012.
Adding ?w=1
to any diff URL will remove any changes only in whitespace, enabling you to see only that code that has changed.
When cloning a repo the .git
can be left off the edge.
$ git clone https://github.com/tiimgreen/github-cheat-sheet
Hub is a command line tool that wraps git in order to extend it with extra features and commands that make working with GitHub easier.
This allows you to do things like:
$ hub clone tiimgreen/toc
Which translates to:
$ git clone git://github.com/tiimgreen/toc.git
To move to the previous directory in the command line:
$ cd -
Similarly, to move to the last branch in git:
$ git checkout -
# Switched to branch 'master'
$ git checkout -
# Switched to branch 'next'
git.io is a simple URL shortener for GitHub.
Gists are an easy way to work with small bits of code without creating a fully fledged repo.
Although, Gists can be treated as a full repo so they can be cloned like any other:
$ git clone https://gist.github.com/tiimgreen/10545817
When on a repo page keyboard shortcuts allow you to navigate easily.
Pressing t
will bring up a file explorer.
Pressing w
will bring up the branch selector.
Pressing s
will select the search bar.
To see all of the shortcuts for given page type shift+?
If a particular commit fixes an issue, any of the keywords fix/fixes/fixed
or close/closes/closed
, followed by the issue number, will close the issue.
$ git commit -m "Fix cock up, fixes #12"
This closes the issue and references the closing commit.
If you want to link to another issue in the same repo, simple type hash #
then the issue number, it will be auto-linked.
To link to an issue in another repo, user_name/repo_name#ISSUE_NUMBER
e.g. tiimgreen/toc#12
.
To add syntax highlighting to code in README:
require 'tabbit'
table = Tabbit.new('Name', 'Email')
table.add_row('Tim Green', '[email protected]')
puts table.to_s
To view all commits on a repo by author add ?author=username
to the URL.
https://github.com/rails/rails/commits/master?author=dhh
Commits can be pushed with no code changes by adding --allow-empty
$ git commit -m "Big-ass commit" --allow-empty
To use GitHub to compare branches, change the URL to look like this:
https://github.com/user/repo/compare/{range}
Where {range} = master...4-1-stable
e.g.:
https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/master...4-1-stable
{range}
can be changed to things like:
https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/master@{1.day.ago}...master
https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/master@{2014-10-04}...master
which allows you to see the difference on the master branch up a set time ago or a specified date.
Adding #L52
to the end of a code file URL will highlight that line number.
It also works with ranges, e.g. #L53-L60
:
https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/master/activemodel/lib/active_model.rb#L53-L60
Emojis can be generated on Pull Requests, Issues, READMEs, etc. using :name_of_emoji:
:smile:
:poop:
:shipit:
:+1:
๐ ๐ฉ ๐
The full list of supported Emojis on GitHub can be found here.
Images and GIFs can be added to comments, READMEs etc.:
![Alt Text](http://image_url.com/image.jpg)
All images are cached on GitHub, so if your host goes down, the image will remain available.
$ git status
Can be changed to:
$ git status -sb
A git query allows you to search all your previous commit messages and finds the most recent one matching the query.
$ git show :/query
Where query
is the term you want to search, this then finds the last one and gives details on the lines that were changed.
NOTE: Press q
to quit.
$ git branch --merged
Will give you a list of all branches that have been merged into your current branch.
Conversely:
$ git branch --no-merged
Will give you a list of branches that have not been merged into your current branch.
Your .gitconfig
is the file that contains all your preferences.
Aliases are helpers that let you define your own git calls. For example you could set git a
to run git add --all
.
To add an alias, either navigate to ~/.gitconfig
and fill it out in the following format:
[alias]
co = checkout
cm = commit
p = push
or type in the command line:
$ git config alias.new_alias git_function
e.g.
$ git config alias.cm commit
NOTE: for an alias with multiple functions use quotes:
$ git config alias.ac 'add -A . && commit'
Some recommendations include:
$ git cm
is Alias of:
$ git commit
```bash $ git ac ``` is Alias of: ```bash $ git add . $ git commit ```
```bash $ git st ``` is Alias of: ```bash $ git status -sb ```
Currently if you type git comit
you will get this result:
$ git comit -m "Message"
# git: 'comit' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.
# Did you mean this?
# commit
To call commit
when comit
is typed, just enable autocorrect:
$ git config --global help.autocorrect 1
So now you will get this result:
$ git comit -m "Message"
# WARNING: You called a Git command named 'comit', which does not exist.
# Continuing under the assumption that you meant 'commit'
# in 0.1 seconds automatically...