I found out a curious thing today and was wondering if somebody could shed some light into what the difference is here I have the following commit history Import numpy as np a = np.arange(12).reshape(4,3) for a in a
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A = a + 1.
In this example, we'll squash the last 3 commits
I must say that for the really curious, this is good knowledge, but for the average c# application, the difference between the wording in the other answers and the actual stuff going on is so far below the abstraction level of the language that it really makes no difference C# is not assembler, and out of 99.9% of the times i++ or ++i are used in code, the things going on in the background. I have a project in a remote repository, synchronized with a local repository (development) and the server one (production) I've been making some committed changes already pushed to remote and pul.
I was doing some work in my repository and noticed a file had local changes I didn't want them anymore so i deleted the file, thinking i can just checkout a fresh copy I wanted to do the git equi. Will update the answer if/when will get a better one
Additionally, created a brand new hello world express project, and still have seen the same problem on express 5.
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 github repository being broken, you can also delete and recreate the master branch on github after your reset I need to download.vsix versions of extensions for my coding environment (python and pylance) on an offline machine, but there does not appear to be a way to do so