> I see. Well, it would be nice if it gave a little warning. I think I
> understand why it happened now though. I was tagging some old versions
> that I had failed to do in the past. Not exactly sure how but that
> must have been why.
I believe the warnings about this have been getting more and mo
On Wednesday 02 June 2010 10:40:53 Konstantin Khomoutov wrote:
> Also, my idea was this: I found myself in situations like this one
> being discussed, and my first temptation after finding the relevant
> top commit in the reflog always was "tag that immediately, then cool
> down, analyse the situa
On Jun 2, 1:56 am, Dan Preston wrote:
> > Yes.
> > Or `git tag recentwork 8658a39`.
> > Or `git checkout master && git merge 8658a39`.
>
> Everything Konstantin said is correct, but I just wanted to add that
> git tag will not get you out of the "detached HEAD" state, so you'll
> probably want to
> Yes.
> Or `git tag recentwork 8658a39`.
> Or `git checkout master && git merge 8658a39`.
Everything Konstantin said is correct, but I just wanted to add that
git tag will not get you out of the "detached HEAD" state, so you'll
probably want to create a branch, or merge the hash into master
direc
On Jun 2, 1:45 am, Dan Preston wrote:
[...]
> Yeah, agreed. It's not always immediately obvious. It'll say "Not
> currently on any branch." in the git commit message boilerplate as
> well as git status output though, so I try to keep my eyes peeled for
> that not being the branch I think I'm on
On Jun 2, 1:07 am, Trans wrote:
> Sorry, make that:
> $ git branch recentwork 8658a39
Yes.
Or `git tag recentwork 8658a39`.
Or `git checkout master && git merge 8658a39`.
In this sense, tag and branch names are just alternative means to
refer to these "true" names of commit objects which are
> $ git branch recentwork 9c51d95
>
> And I will have a branch at that point?
> Sorry, make that:
>
> $ git branch recentwork 8658a39
I can honestly never remember what order the branch name and hash go
in so I tend to usually use the more longwinded approach.
$ git checkout 8658a39
$ git chec
Sorry, make that:
$ git branch recentwork 8658a39
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On Jun 1, 4:39 pm, Dan Preston wrote:
> You should be ok. You can use the "git reflog" command to view the
> history of what you've had checked out. You can then checkout the
> hash commit of your latest work again and create a branch from it. Or
> alternatively you can merge that hash back t