1593161700
In this video I’ll dive into some of the ways Git allows us to rewrite commit history. Specifically I cover: amending commits, rewording commit messages, deleting commits, reordering commits, squashing commits and splitting commits.
#amend #reword #delete #reorder #git
1593161700
In this video I’ll dive into some of the ways Git allows us to rewrite commit history. Specifically I cover: amending commits, rewording commit messages, deleting commits, reordering commits, squashing commits and splitting commits.
#amend #reword #delete #reorder #git
1617875220
In this short article, we’ll be exploring some quick git commands that can help us in digging through our repositories’ history of commits. We’ll look at
#git #git-log #git-commands #git-history #aws
1604109000
Git has become ubiquitous as the preferred version control system (VCS) used by developers. Using Git adds immense value especially for engineering teams where several developers work together since it becomes critical to have a system of integrating everyone’s code reliably.
But with every powerful tool, especially one that involves collaboration with others, it is better to establish conventions to follow lest we shoot ourselves in the foot.
At DeepSource, we’ve put together some guiding principles for our own team that make working with a VCS like Git easier. Here are 5 simple rules you can follow:
Oftentimes programmers working on something get sidetracked into doing too many things when working on one particular thing — like when you are trying to fix one particular bug and you spot another one, and you can’t resist the urge to fix that as well. And another one. Soon, it snowballs and you end up with so many changes all going together in one commit.
This is problematic, and it is better to keep commits as small and focused as possible for many reasons, including:
Additionally, it helps you mentally parse changes you’ve made using git log
.
#open source #git #git basics #git tools #git best practices #git tutorials #git commit
1597916460
There is no doubt that Git plays a significant role in software development. It allows developers to work on the same code base at the same time. Still, developers struggle for code quality. Why? They fail to follow git best practices. In this post, I will explain seven core best practices of Git and a Bonus Section.
Committing something to Git means that you have changed your code and want to save these changes as a new trusted version.
Version control systems will not limit you in how you commit your code.
But is it good? Not quite.
Because you are compromising code quality, and it will take more time to review code. So overall, team productivity will be reduced. The best practice is to make an atomic commit.
When you do an atomic commit, you’re committing only one change. It might be across multiple files, but it’s one single change.
Many developers make some changes, then commit, then push. And I have seen many repositories with unwanted files like dll, pdf, etc.
You can ask two questions to yourself, before check-in your code into the repository
You can simply use the .gitignore file to avoid unwanted files in the repository. If you are working on more then one repo, it’s easy to use a global .gitignore file (without adding or pushing). And .gitignore file adds clarity and helps you to keep your code clean. What you can commit, and it will automatically ignore the unwanted files like autogenerated files like .dll and .class, etc.
#git basics #git command #git ignore #git best practices #git tutorial for beginners #git tutorials
1595201363
First thing, we will need a table and i am creating products table for this example. So run the following query to create table.
CREATE TABLE `products` (
`id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`name` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`description` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`created_at` timestamp NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
`updated_at` datetime DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=7 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci
Next, we will need to insert some dummy records in this table that will be deleted.
INSERT INTO `products` (`name`, `description`) VALUES
('Test product 1', 'Product description example1'),
('Test product 2', 'Product description example2'),
('Test product 3', 'Product description example3'),
('Test product 4', 'Product description example4'),
('Test product 5', 'Product description example5');
Now we are redy to create a model corresponding to this products table. Here we will create Product model. So let’s create a model file Product.php file under app directory and put the code below.
<?php
namespace App;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Product extends Model
{
protected $fillable = [
'name','description'
];
}
Now, in this second step we will create some routes to handle the request for this example. So opeen routes/web.php file and copy the routes as given below.
routes/web.php
Route::get('product', 'ProductController@index');
Route::delete('product/{id}', ['as'=>'product.destroy','uses'=>'ProductController@destroy']);
Route::delete('delete-multiple-product', ['as'=>'product.multiple-delete','uses'=>'ProductController@deleteMultiple']);
#laravel #delete multiple rows in laravel using ajax #laravel ajax delete #laravel ajax multiple checkbox delete #laravel delete multiple rows #laravel delete records using ajax #laravel multiple checkbox delete rows #laravel multiple delete