417 skills found · Page 5 of 14
agno-agi / GcodeSelf-learning coding agent designed for the post IDE future. Writes, tests and commits code inside a container using git worktrees.
BecoSystems / SpacewarRepositório para testes de fork e aprendizado do git
LadyKerr / GitGoingBeginner-friendly project focused on tracking progress and learning Git.
KevinVerre / Kevins Guide To GitHelpful information for people learning Git
lennerd / Git For BeginnersThesis project, explorable explanation and tutorial for learning Git.
MikeRodeman / Git Cheat SheetA beginner to intermediate cheat sheet for Git in light mode and dark mode. In DOCX, ODF, PDF, and PNG formats.
keshavsuki / Recall Stack5-layer memory system for Claude Code: rules, session state, git context, behavioral learning, knowledge base
nnstreamer / ApiMachine Learning API (Origin: C++: SNAP, C/C#: Tizen API, Java: Samsung-Research ML API). For Web/JS, https://git.tizen.org/cgit/platform/core/api/webapi-plugins/
Erucae / Learning GitNo description available
Fadingvision / BlackLearning.github.io博客和学习记录
jojo1317 / Git Quick Reference For BeginnersThere are many good resources for learning Git. (Here's an excellent online book, and this is my videos series introducing Git and GitHub.) But once you've learned the basics, it can be hard to remember which commands to use to execute the most common tasks. I went searching for a Git reference guide that would be useful for beginners like myself, but didn't find anything ideal: Git - the simple guide is useful as a high-level overview of the basic commands, but doesn't provide enough details. Git Cheatsheet uses a nice interactive approach to summarize a ton of git commands on one screen, but it doesn't give you any sense of workflow. Git Reference is close to what I was looking for, and links each entry to the relevant section of Pro Git (awesome!), but is too long for a quick reference. So, I decided to make my own reference guide! The guide below is organized by task, with an emphasis on basic tasks and common command line arguments. It begins with the workflow for cloning, updating, and syncing with a remote repo because that's a common way to get started with Git and GitHub. Note that this is only a reference guide, and will not teach you Git. It does not explain the difference between staged and committed, what to do with a .gitignore file, or when to create a branch. But if you are already familiar with those concepts, this guide will hopefully refresh your memory and help you to discover other commands you might need. Please enjoy, and let me know your thoughts or questions in the comments! Cloning a remote repo (that you created or forked on GitHub) git clone < your-repo-URL >: copies your remote repo to your local machine (in a subdirectory with the repo's name), and automatically creates an "origin" handle git remote add upstream < forked-repo-URL >: adds an "upstream" handle for the repo you forked git remote -v: shows the handles for your remotes git remote show < handlename >: inspect a remote in detail Tracking, committing, and pushing your changes git add < name >: if untracked, start tracking a file or directory; if tracked and modified, stage it for committing git reset HEAD < name >: unstage a changed file git commit -m "message": commits everything that has been staged with a message -a -m "message": automatically stages any modified files, then commits --amend -m "new message": fixes the message from the last commit git push origin master: pushes your commits to the master branch of the origin Syncing your local repo with the upstream repo git fetch upstream: fetch the upstream and store its master branch in "upstream/master" git merge upstream/master: merge that branch into the working branch Viewing the status of your files git status: check which files have been modified and/or staged since the last commit git diff: shows the diff for files that are modified but not staged --staged: shows the diff for files that are staged but not committed Viewing the commit history git log: shows the detailed commit history -1: only shows the last 1 commit -p: shows the line diff for each commit -p --word-diff: shows the word diff for each commit --stat: shows stats instead of diff details --name-status: shows a simpler version of stat --oneline: just shows commit comments gitk: open a visual commit browser Managing branches git branch: shows a list of local branches < branchname >: create a new branch with that name -d < branchname >: delete a branch -v: show the last commit on each local branch -a: show local and remote branches -va: show the last commit on each local and remote branch --merged: list which branches are already merged into the working branch (safe to delete) --no-merged: list which branches are not merged into the working branch git checkout < branchname >: switch the HEAD pointer to a different branch -b < branchname >: create a new branch and switch to it Removing, deleting, and reverting files git rm < name >: deletes that file from the disk, then stages its deletion --cached < name >: stops tracking a file, then stages its deletion (but does not delete it from the disk) git mv < oldname > < newname >: renames the file on disk, then stages the deletion of the old name and addition of the new name git checkout -- < name >: revert a modified file on disk back to the last committed version Other basic commands git init: initialize Git in an existing directory git config --list: shows your Git configuration touch .gitignore: create an empty .gitignore file
learning-software-engineering / Learning Software Engineering.github.ioNo description available
prof3ssorSt3v3 / Learning GithubJust a sample repo for learning the basics of GitHub
catiaspsilva / Academic ResourcesThis repository contains an ongoing list of educational resources for python programming, version control with git, mathematics for machine learning, data science, machine learning, and deep learning.
gordonkwokkwok / DVD Rental PostgreSQL ProjectThis project is an open-source educational resource for learning PostgreSQL and database management. It simulates a DVD rental business with 15 well-crafted tables, providing hands-on experience in SQL querying, data structures, and version control using Git.
pooya-mohammadi / Today I LearnedToday I learned contains Q&A of what I have learned so far. It encompasses topics like: python, deep-learning, cuda-installation, docker, git, linux, etc.
Viha27 / Python DevopsA Devops pipeline is set of automated processes and tools that the development (Dev) and operations (Ops) teams implement to build, test, and deploy software faster and easier. In this course you will complete DevOps pipeline generally consists of a set of tools which are normally broken down into the following categories: Plan Code Integrate Test Release Deploy Operate This learning path will cover: Git is an open-source and distributed version control system. Github is git repository hosting service used for code sharing, bug tracking, feature request and much more. PyCharm is an integrated development environment (IDE) for python programing language. Flask is a python web framework. HTML is the standard markup language for Web pages. CSS is a style sheet language use to style a HTML document. SQLAlchemy is an open-source SQL toolkit and object-relational mapper which gives full power and flexibility of SQL. Selenium is used to automate web browser interaction. Pytest is unit testing framework that allows users to write test codes. Ngrok allows to expose a web server running on your local machine to the internet. Github Action enables you to include Continues Integration (CI) and continuous deployment (CD) capabilities and many other features directly in your repository. Docker is an open source containerization platform enables developers to package applications into containers. Docker Hub is a cloud-based repository for finding and sharing container images with your team. Kubernetes is an open-source container orchestration for automating deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications. This course is one stop shop where you will learn web development, continuous integration, continuous deployment, containerization, writing neat and quality code, devops concepts and much more with python programing language. What you’ll learn Learn to build Continuous Integration Continuous Deployment pipeline Build CI CD tool to update docker image after any update Learn to create dockerfile Learn the fundamental concepts of Docker Learn the fundamental concepts of Kubernetes Learn to create Kubernetes YAML files Learn to deploy high availability, fault tolerance, scalable application Learn all the basic and advanced git commands Learn different types of branches like master, developer, feature, release and hotfix branch Learn fundamental concepts of Version Control System Learn to use Github actions for CI CD pipeline Learn to build python flask web application Learn to use SQL Alchemy Lean to create HTML pages using HTML, CSS and bootstrap Are there any course requirements or prerequisites? Git installed Docker installed Kubernetes installed Any IDE Github account Docker hub account Who this course is for: Anyone who wants to Enhance their skills in DevOps domain Developers and IT Pros Instructor User photo Pranjal Srivastava Docker | Kubernetes | AWS | Azure | ML | Linux | Python I am an Instructor, Devops engineer, machine learning enthusiast, cloud expert and passionate developer. I have authored 60+ courses with over 50,000+ students worldwide across 175+ countries on wide array of technologies like containerization, machine learning, Linux, programming languages and cloud computing platforms like Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Service and IBM Cloud.
Eric-lHHI / Git Learning NotesNo description available
nopeNoshishi / Learn GitRepository for learning Git concept.
git-learning-game / Oh My Git 2A Git learning game in your browser!