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Merge pull request #80 from RichardLitt/feature/reset-single-file
Added explanation for reseting a single file
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commit
5b935d5597
@ -481,8 +481,7 @@ One way of reseting to match origin (to have the same as what is on the remote)
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(master)$ git reset --hard origin/my-branch
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```
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<a href="discard-local-uncommited-changes"></a>
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<a href="i-want-to-discard-my-local-uncommitted-changes"></a>
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## I want to discard my local, uncommitted changes
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If you want to only reset to some commit between origin and your local, you can do this:
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@ -498,6 +497,12 @@ If you want to only reset to some commit between origin and your local, you can
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(master)$ git checkout -f
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```
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To reset only a specific file, you can use that the filename as the argument:
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```sh
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$ git reset filename
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```
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<a href="undo-git-reset-hard"></a>
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## I accidentally did a hard reset, and I want my changes back
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