The assignments listed here should take you approximately 25 total minutes.
To start this assignment, click the button in the upper right-hand corner that says Fork. This is now your copy of the document. Click the Edit button when you're ready to start adding your answers. To save your work, click the green button in the bottom right-hand corner. You can always come back and re-edit your gist.
Need help? You can go back to the files/directories portion of the lesson here.
Scroll down to the bottom of this page and look at the image of the directories and files. Use commands in your terminal to create the directories and files structured exactly how they appear in the image.
When you're done, type history
to see your commands. Copy and paste the commands that were used to create the directory and files:
36 ls
37 mkdir session_3_practice
38 cd session_3_practice
39 touch budget.csv
40 touch mentors.txt
41 ls
42 cd ..
43 cd session_3_practice
44 mkdir notes
45 ls
46 cd notes
47 touch git_notes.txt
48 touch command_line_notes.txt
49 cd ..
50 mkdir practice
51 cd practice
52 touch git_practice.txt
53 mkdir projects
54 cd projects
55 touch game.jsgg
Since this is just a practice directory, feel free to remove the parent directory session_3_practice
when you're done with this exercise.
You can reference the files/directories portion of the lesson here.
Follow the steps below to practice the git workflow. Be ready to copy-paste your terminal output as confirmation of your practice.
- Create a directory called
git_homework
. Inside of there, create a file calledquotes.txt
. - Initialize the directory
- Check the git status
- Add your
quotes.txt
file to the staging area - Check the git status
- Create an initial commit
- Check the status
- Add your favorite quote to the
quotes.txt
file - Check the status
- Check the diff
- Add the changes to the staging area
- Commit the new changes
- Check the status
- Show the log in oneline format
Copy and paste all of the terminal text from this process below (not just the history):
deejay~$ ls
Applications Library Public
Desktop Movies session_3_practice
Documents Music
Downloads Pictures
deejay~$ mkdir git_homework
deejay~$ cd git_homework
deejay~/git_homework$ touch quotes.txt
deejay~/git_homework$ git init
Initialized empty Git repository in /Users/deejay/git_homework/.git/
deejay~/git_homework$ git add quotes.txt
deejay~/git_homework$ git status
On branch master
No commits yet
Changes to be committed:
(use "git rm --cached <file>..." to unstage)
new file: quotes.txt
deejay~/git_homework$ git commit -m 'Initial commit'
[master (root-commit) 506c8df] Initial commit
1 file changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 quotes.txt
deejay~/git_homework[master]$ git status
On branch master
nothing to commit, working tree clean
deejay~/git_homework[master]$ echo "You miss 100 percent of the shots you don't take" >> quotes.txt
deejay~/git_homework[master !]$ git status
On branch master
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
modified: quotes.txt
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
deejay~/git_homework[master !]$ git diff
diff --git a/quotes.txt b/quotes.txt
index e69de29..409cd21 100644
--- a/quotes.txt
+++ b/quotes.txt
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+You miss 100 percent of the shots you don't take
deejay~/git_homework[master !]$ git add quotes.txt
deejay~/git_homework[master !]$ git commit -m '100 percent shot quote'
[master 0f8bdca] 100 percent shot quote
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
deejay~/git_homework[master]$ git status
On branch master
nothing to commit, working tree clean
deejay~/git_homework[master]$ git log --oneline
0f8bdca (HEAD -> master) 100 percent shot quote
506c8df Initial commit
deejay~/git_homework[master]$
IMPORTANT: Do not remove this git_homework
directory. You will be using this directory during Thursday's session.
If you have any questions, comments, or confusions that you would an instructor to address, list them below:
- Just having fun!
-
If time permits and you want extra git practice and alternative explanations (it's often beneficial to have something explained in many different ways), check out Codecademy's Git Course, particularly the first free item on the syllabus, "Basic Git Workflow". In Mod 0, we will not cover anything beyond Codecademy's intro section; however, you are welcome to check out the other git lessons listed on the syllabus if you want a head start.
-
This course is how I personally learned command line. If time permits, I highly recommend reading and practicing.
-
Also recommended by Jeff Casimir: Michael Hartl's Learn Enough Command Line.
-
Add tab completion to make your life easier: Type Less. Do More.
Great job, @djavanm! Glad you're having fun!