On Jan 6, 10:51 am, "Michael P. Soulier" <msoul...@digitaltorque.ca> wrote: > On 06/01/10 Trans said: > > > I am using github. So I have my own fork. So it's more involved then > > that. I would have to delete my fork, then refork it and then reclone > > it. I was hoping for a simple way to update my repo without having to > > do all that. > > As you haven't answered my question I'll assume you made your changes on > master, and now you want to undo them. The simplest way is likely to revert > the commits you added and them pull again, but there are other ways of > rewriting history if required.
I'm not sure I even made any changes to the master branch. I tried using GitHub's interface to apply all the changes from the repo I forked, and although it initially said all commits would apply just dandy, after the I applied the first four, it could no longer commit most of the rest. So at that point I was stuck and had little idea as to the state of my repo compared to the original. > > Too much reading... and I've already had to read too much as far as I > > am concerned. > > I see. Best of luck then. I think I wasn't clear. Sorry. Ironically, what I meant is coincidently on par with your Einstein quote below: > "Any intelligent fool can make things bigger and more complex... It takes a > touch of genius - and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." > --Albert Einstein That's my feeling about git! And what I meant about already reading too much. ~Tom
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