I’m doing a solo coding project for work. It’s a tool that you interact with similar to npm or cargo, where you can create a new workspace, run / test etc. Importantly, you have to be in the working directory for the commands to work…

Yesterday I decided to go home early to do remote work at home. Before i left i quickly did git add ., committed and pushed. I turned on my computer this morning, ran git pull, and noticed that… only some files got pushed, but more importantly none of the code i wrote yesterday made it through. Yup, I was still cd’d into my workspace folder and not at the project root, so I only committed the mock workspace folder 😄

Luckily i didnt write or change much this time, but lesson learned: git add -A or git commit -am '...'

  • Thinker
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    21 year ago

    Even better, just choose exactly which files to add to a commit, and keep the commits small and meaningful units of work! If you never use the shorthand, you won’t have this issue, and your commit history will be easier to understand and expand upon!

    • @[email protected]OP
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      fedilink
      21 year ago

      This is what i should be doing :)

      I have been justifying it away though cause it’s early stages of the project so it’s hard to get my bearings. But the dust is starting to settle enough now that I can probably think about committing units of work rather than this daily snapshotting ive been doing