
How do I clone a specific Git branch? - Stack Overflow
Git clone will clone remote branch into local. Is there any way to clone a specific branch by myself without switching branches on the remote repository?
git - How do I delete a commit from a branch? - Stack Overflow
I think this is not a duplicate of Git undo last commit as it asks how to delete any commit from a branch. I also think non of the answers actually address this question. They all rewind the last commits, not …
How do I delete a Git branch locally and remotely?
Jan 5, 2010 · Don't forget to do a git fetch --all --prune on other machines after deleting the remote branch on the server. ||| After deleting the local branch with git branch -d and deleting the remote …
github - How do I reverse a commit in git? - Stack Overflow
I think you need to push a revert commit. So pull from github again, including the commit you want to revert, then use git revert and push the result. If you don't care about other people's clones of your …
Download a single folder or directory from a GitHub repository
How can I download only a specific folder or directory from a remote Git repository hosted on GitHub? Say the example GitHub repository lives here: [email protected]:foobar/Test.git Its directory str...
Using "If cell contains #N/A" as a formula condition.
Feb 25, 2016 · I need help on my Excel sheet. How can I declare the following IF condition properly? if A1 = "n/a" then C1 = B1 else if A1 != "n/a" or has value(int) then C1 = A1*B1
git - Hard reset of a single file - Stack Overflow
Jan 24, 2015 · How do I discard the changes to a single file and overwrite it with a fresh HEAD copy? I want to do git reset --hard to only a single file.
How to get all groups that a user is a member of? - Stack Overflow
PowerShell's Get-ADGroupMember cmdlet returns members of a specific group. Is there a cmdlet or property to get all the groups that a particular user is a member of?
How do I revert a Git repository to a previous commit?
Nov 6, 2010 · How do I revert from my current state to a snapshot made on a certain commit? If I do git log, then I get the following output: $ git log commit ...
git - How do I modify a specific commit? - Stack Overflow
I have the following commit history: HEAD HEAD~ HEAD~2 HEAD~3 git commit --amend modifies the current HEAD commit. But how do I modify HEAD~3?