On Wed, Mar 05, 2008 at 05:24:56PM +0100, Behdad Esfahbod wrote: > On Wed, 2008-03-05 at 16:46 +0100, Olav Vitters wrote: > > > > > I will note that a subset of the functionality from git checkout and > > > git reset often get confused with git revert. Another nasty > > unneeded > > > UI wart (that is surprisingly easy to fix I might add...). > > Not sure I follow. Those commands do very clearly different things: > > git-checkout: Doesn't touch history. Checks out a branch as your > current working branch. > > git-reset: Removes some of the most recent commits in the branch, as > if they never happened. It applies the changes from those commits to > your working tree, unless you provide --hard. > > git-revert: Adds a new commit to the branch, undoing an old one, with > a comment mentioning that this is reverting that old commit.
Ah, I meant that last one. SVN just undoes your local changes with revert... I'm not sure what the Git equivalent is from reading above though. -- Regards, Olav _______________________________________________ Gnome-infrastructure mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-infrastructure
