See how a minor change to your commit message style can make a difference.
Tip
Take a look at git-conventional-commits , a CLI util to ensure these conventions, determine version and generate changelogs
import win32gui | |
import re | |
class WindowMgr: | |
"""Encapsulates some calls to the winapi for window management""" | |
def __init__ (self): | |
"""Constructor""" | |
self._handle = None | |
See how a minor change to your commit message style can make a difference.
Tip
Take a look at git-conventional-commits , a CLI util to ensure these conventions, determine version and generate changelogs
Removing the last commit
To remove the last commit from git, you can simply run git reset --hard HEAD^
If you are removing multiple commits from the top, you can run git reset --hard HEAD~2 to remove the last two commits. You can increase the number to remove even more commits.
If you want to "uncommit" the commits, but keep the changes around for reworking, remove the "--hard": git reset HEAD^
which will evict the commits from the branch and from the index, but leave the working tree around.
If you want to save the commits on a new branch name, then run git branch newbranchname
before doing the git reset.