With " learn X in Y minutes" kind of tutorials getting millions of views these days, its great to see this no-nonsense, content-first channel. Good job! Keep it up!
I would strongly advise to watch the whole video because it's a great source of information, but for those reviewing the content or looking for a specific concept, here's an overview: 0:00 - Introduction 1:31 - Distributed vs Central Version Control 3:17 - Installing Git 3:39 - First Time Setup 6:36 - Getting Started (Local repository) 10:41 - Git File Control 14:55 - Getting Started (Remote repository) 20:37 - Branching 27:38 - Faster Example 29:41 - Conclusion
There are "before and after" Coreys tutorials. Before one may be confused or stuck with a problem. After things make sense again and the problems get solutions. Just simply the best tutorials around.
this comment is for those who are looking for best content available in youtube for coding: only few channels are here who really have great content one is corey schafer and other is sentdex both of you guys are awesome. You both have taught me alot. Thanks, sir.
i have watched a 1.5 hrs lecture on Git from my university and i didn't get half of the information i got here and the few things the prof actually told us were explained in the most complicated and unnecessarily exhaustive way possible. thanks for your work man, it's truly appreciated.
Great Video. I'm studying a paper on Software Engineering and Design and this video on GIT was more educational and of higher quality than 2 x 1 hour university lectures on the same topic. Thanks
Odin project student here... I've watched this video 5 times over. Not because it's difficult to understand, but because it's so well explained and straight to the point; a lot to take in all at once too. Well done and thank you for this resource!
I have tons of knowledge when it comes to SVN, so how you presented this video to help me transition was beautiful. Well done, great presentation don't change a thing.
As someone just entering the field of data engineering and version control being so new to me, this was, hands down the best video to explain the concepts. I tried reading some documentation online and watching other videos. But this was the easiest to digest. Thank you so much for putting this together. God bless!
When I was looking for some tutorials on Git I didn't have to think twice before opening this video. That's where the quality of your tutorials are! Love your tuts!
Great explanation. I’ve been confused for so long just not ingraining it and halfway through the video something just clicked and the process started to make sense
Excellent Tutorial. Super helpful to start the student with remote then clone it, and then watch how mods on cloned repo interact with the remote. Most teachers make huge assumptions and leave the student in the dust within five minutes. You don't gloss over stuff when you teach. Thanks very much!
@@swaraagsistla8641 he probably meant what he said. There is still a lot to learn and after watching the video I even think that 1% ain't that little...
Dear Corey, the best illustration on git intro on fast track I have ever watched. I am grateful to you. Thank You and appreciate your time. You must be a very nice person to spend your time and sharing your knowledge with us. Please keep up the good work. the world is benefiting from you my friend.
This was probably one of the most perfect tutorials of any technical subject that I have ever seen. So many tutorials make assumptions that they don't realise they are making and they skip things. This was perfect.
There are many tutorials out there but it's hard to find one that's to the point, relevant and easy to understand without too many frills and gimmicks. Well done.
So I've taken some notes for the last "fast example" of the video (the one that concludes all the commands). So, here is the workflow you will repeat forever from now on: git config --global user.name git config --global user.email git clone git branch my_new_branch git checkout my_new_branch (make changes to the code) git status git commit -m "Add @function in file7" git push -u origin my_new_branch (wait for unit tests to complete) (if all unit tests pass, then do these) git checkout master git pull origin master git merge my_new_branch git push origin master (now time to delete my_new_branch) git branch -d my_new_branch git branch -a git push origin --delete my_new_branch
Got to say, you are a natural teacher. Very nice explanations, good pace, engaging and easy to follow. One of the best tutorials available on youtube!! Thank you so much :)
@@marymad4203 me too, i got so lost, i cant seem to find the .gitignore or after touching it, also hard to follow the steps without actually doing it as he speaks
@@andikanakpan8436 I know, it happens sometimes, is normal. You can focus on git init, clone, status, add and commit for now, just to familiarize with git workflow. And the others commands you can learn after you learn these above. I hope it helps you :)
Odin Project brought me here. Even 5 years this video is still relevant and game changer for git noobs like me. Thanks for sharing your expertise. Ps: What's the service you are using to show slides? Is it selfhosted?
Thanks to you, I am now on GitHub successfully. Took many times through the video, but no other video made the process clear enough for me tackle it. I'm starting to teach the nieces a few things in electronics and microprocessors. This is going to help greatly on the programming end. Much appreciated.
I know it's been several years since these Git videos came out but I wanted to thank you for them, as they have made a big impact on my comfort level with Git for day-to-day development work in my team. I'm not afraid of Git anymore and I can use it with confidence. Great examples and your clear speaking voice made the material accessible for me. Thanks a bunch, Corey!!
I was seeing which video should i watch to know about GIT, Fortunately i landed here. I only downloaded first video, after watching 1st one, my soul forced me to download and watch all videos. Today is 31/10/2020. Thank you sir.
Sorry you feel this way! Learning this stuff, as with anything you're learning for the first time, can be frustrating. Hope me offering some advice isn't seen as presumptuous on my part. In the wild, git is used primarily on teams collaborating on code, but you can use it on your own personal projects to keep track of changes. If I were you, I'd try to start a small project - just something with a few lines of code - and then head over to GitHub. From there, create an account, set up a repository, and commit your code to that repository. Of course, you need to initialize your local repository and "connect" it to the remote one you've set up on GitHub as well. This tutorial gives you most of the tools to do that, but you'll also probably need to Google around a bit.
God bless you. Your teachings are example for many aspirant who would love to share their technical knowledge through online. Excellent teaching skills and very important session on git. Thank you so much.
I have to say, your videos are so useful and you have such a good way of explaining and teaching different concepts, subjects and how to's. I have watched and used quite a few of your videos, and found them so helpful and educational. This channel is such a great resource for anyone trying learn more about any of the subjects you have videos about. Thank you for being such an educator and lifesaver!
Corey Schafer is the coolest programmer there in on RUclips. Very helpful videos man. The best part of your videos is that they're able to create the bigger picture. One only needs to add in the details in their journey to master the topic. This is a remarkable feature of all your videos. Kudos bro.
Best Video in simplified form. Please keep posting simple but powerful videos. This video shows that no. of views doesn't define the goodness of a video.
I get an error when I push my cloned repository ... remote: error: refusing to update checked out branch: refs/heads/master remote: error: By default, updating the current branch in a non-bare repository remote: is denied, because it will make the index and work tree inconsistent remote: with what you pushed, and will require 'git reset --hard' to match remote: the work tree to HEAD. remote: remote: You can set the 'receive.denyCurrentBranch' configuration variable remote: to 'ignore' or 'warn' in the remote repository to allow pushing into remote: its current branch; however, this is not recommended unless you remote: arranged to update its work tree to match what you pushed in some remote: other way. remote: remote: To squelch this message and still keep the default behaviour, set remote: 'receive.denyCurrentBranch' configuration variable to 'refuse'. To /home/alvise/clone1/../Git_test ! [remote rejected] master -> master (branch is currently checked out) error: failed to push some refs to '/home/alvise/clone1/../Git_test' Any idea? I even try git reset --hard Thanks a lot..... By the way awesome video...
I'm guessing but it might be an artifact that for the sake of this tutorial we were messing with master branch on both the remote repo and and the clone repo. In general this is not good practice. Branching is a beast unto itself. This did the trick for me: "git config receive.denyCurrentBranch ignore" (case sensitive).
this was indeed quite fast but helped a lot on building that little memory for the git commands and real git workflows, thank you for helping on our understanding of this awesome tool and congrats for the awesome video :)
Thank you Thank you thank you so much , you explained each and every thing about git in smoothly way . I like to interact with CLI rather than GUI and tutorial is perfect for me . Thank you so much sir 🙏🙏🙏 From India 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳.
No one before had explained me in a so clear and straightforward way what git is and how it works. Many thanks Corey, you're a great teacher. Your videos on Python have also been very useful for me, and I just hope you add some C++ tutorials too :) Thanks again!
Thanks again Corey! This video was very helpful! There was a lot of information thrown out in this video. I was feeling overwhelmed at first, but after taking a break and giving my mind time to rest and absorb what I saw, I rewatched the video again and this time everything clicked! So for the viewers that watch this video, I would recommend watch it once, then take a break and rewatch it until it sinks in. This is a very valuable and powerful lesson.
I think the difficulty of teaching something as complex as Git is deciding, "Should I /explain/ how this feature works or should I just /show/ how it works." I think you do a good job of balancing these two. Hopefully further videos will help explain the how in more detail!
Best I have seen so far about git. Short and clean samples. Simultaneously I followed your steps and did on my own, and that is what I recommend to understand how that works. Don't only watch, instead watch and try on your own. Thank you Corey!
Wow. This is so abstract from the perspective of a rookie, and yet, so clear. Why? Corey uses the simplest possible examples at every step, has code ready to change, makes the simplest possible changes, explains everything he is doing, often before he does it and again after he does it. He does not race through everything, hoping to show us how fast or easy some system is or how clever he is. It's so clear, I was able to deduce some properties of git that he didn't even tackle in his exposition. I absolutely agree with Adrian Wilk: Go through the entire video even if you plan to work with git only locally. No matter what you're doing, take the time to study every video CS makes that has any bearing on your goals. NOBODY DOES IT BETTER. Theres no FOO or BAR here. Instead he names the remote repository "origin" to clarify git's checkout and push commands, showing file changes at every step with appropriate commands. Most of the explanatory video on the web is too basic for me now. Why? BECAUSE OF COREY SHAFER. Good morning Corey! I sure could use a video on using slightly advanced query objects in Django to work with related tables. I'm raising your monthly stipend 50%.
@Corey Schafer, you're a wonderful teacher! I have learned so much from each one of your videos that I've watched. Sincere thanks and please keep sharing your knowledge. Best wishes, just another fan
The best as always Mr Corey ! because of you , I understood the OOP in python , and now I understood exactly how the git and command lines work ! Thanks again Sir!
Thankfully stumbled across this video, though used git earlier was never closely practicing git bash commands but used git extensions and k diff to resolve conflicts but now using gitlab and git bash more often makes me wonder how have I survived and guided many professionals to swim across the git channel as they anxiously noted what I did Thank you @Corey Schafer, for the great video as these are the most required. Will make notes and probably stick on the clip board for quick use and post its on desk;
Just amazing . May be I am falling in love with your way of teaching . I thought I have learned these basics in bits and pieces with the stackoverflow e.t.c but no I learned them after seeing this video . You're the best Corey . You fail to disappoint the beginners like me :)
With " learn X in Y minutes" kind of tutorials getting millions of views these days, its great to see this no-nonsense, content-first channel. Good job! Keep it up!
For beginners, this is the best git tutorial you’ll find in RUclips. Period.
I would strongly advise to watch the whole video because it's a great source of information, but for those reviewing the content or looking for a specific concept, here's an overview:
0:00 - Introduction
1:31 - Distributed vs Central Version Control
3:17 - Installing Git
3:39 - First Time Setup
6:36 - Getting Started (Local repository)
10:41 - Git File Control
14:55 - Getting Started (Remote repository)
20:37 - Branching
27:38 - Faster Example
29:41 - Conclusion
thanks for the timestamp!
Thank you, Adrian.
Thank you!
Hi, how do u add those time-stamp links to your commit? Any doc?
type it like usual@@tetelim4428
3+ years later this video is still super helpful. Thank you very much!
Been viewing a lot of Git Tutorials lately, but this one is the best by far! Highly recommend for complete beginners!
There are "before and after" Coreys tutorials.
Before one may be confused or stuck with a problem.
After things make sense again and the problems get solutions.
Just simply the best tutorials around.
I watched this on May 12, 2020, and it's still the best video to learn how Git works.
this comment is for those who are looking for best content available in youtube for coding: only few channels are here who really have great content one is corey schafer and other is sentdex both of you guys are awesome. You both have taught me alot. Thanks, sir.
The 30 minutes video has build my confidence in working with Git. Thanks alot for this
i have watched a 1.5 hrs lecture on Git from my university and i didn't get half of the information i got here and the few things the prof actually told us were explained in the most complicated and unnecessarily exhaustive way possible. thanks for your work man, it's truly appreciated.
Great Video. I'm studying a paper on Software Engineering and Design and this video on GIT was more educational and of higher quality than 2 x 1 hour university lectures on the same topic. Thanks
This guy is a legend, a video that is 8 years old is the the best at clarifying git and GitHub
Best tutorial I've seen so far and I've been poking around for them for days now. Thank you Corey.
You're welcome. Glad you enjoyed it!
Great
Odin project student here... I've watched this video 5 times over. Not because it's difficult to understand, but because it's so well explained and straight to the point; a lot to take in all at once too.
Well done and thank you for this resource!
I have tons of knowledge when it comes to SVN, so how you presented this video to help me transition was beautiful. Well done, great presentation don't change a thing.
As someone just entering the field of data engineering and version control being so new to me, this was, hands down the best video to explain the concepts. I tried reading some documentation online and watching other videos. But this was the easiest to digest. Thank you so much for putting this together. God bless!
That is the best git video serires on RUclips still in 2019! Great work, thank you so much!
When I was looking for some tutorials on Git I didn't have to think twice before opening this video. That's where the quality of your tutorials are! Love your tuts!
The Odin Project brought me here :)
Yep, its been an awesome website so far.
samee :D hows your journey with TOP been?
@@chan7191 I'm using freecodecamp at the moment, Ill carry on with the Odin project, when I have a better foot into things.
Andrew De Lange thats great! Have fun :)
@@chan7191 AWESOME
Great explanation. I’ve been confused for so long just not ingraining it and halfway through the video something just clicked and the process started to make sense
Best git intro I've seen!
Thanks!
Excellent Tutorial. Super helpful to start the student with remote then clone it, and then watch how mods on cloned repo interact with the remote. Most teachers make huge assumptions and leave the student in the dust within five minutes. You don't gloss over stuff when you teach. Thanks very much!
Great voice for being an instructor
This is one of the most to the point explanation i have come across so far.
Went into this a complete noob and came out 99% noob. Excellent video!!
magnus engø -(99% noob) **
I feel the same! still a lot to learn but more hopeful
@@swaraagsistla8641 he probably meant what he said. There is still a lot to learn and after watching the video I even think that 1% ain't that little...
Dear Corey, the best illustration on git intro on fast track I have ever watched. I am grateful to you. Thank You and appreciate your time. You must be a very nice person to spend your time and sharing your knowledge with us. Please keep up the good work. the world is benefiting from you my friend.
Thanks for the kind words! I'm glad to hear you found this useful!
This was probably one of the most perfect tutorials of any technical subject that I have ever seen. So many tutorials make assumptions that they don't realise they are making and they skip things. This was perfect.
Thank you Corey. Noone teaches us that at the university. This saved so much time for us
Whose's here in 2024?? Corey Schafer is the best teacher of all timee😇😇
There are many tutorials out there but it's hard to find one that's to the point, relevant and easy to understand without too many frills and gimmicks. Well done.
So I've taken some notes for the last "fast example" of the video (the one that concludes all the commands). So, here is the workflow you will repeat forever from now on:
git config --global user.name
git config --global user.email
git clone
git branch my_new_branch
git checkout my_new_branch
(make changes to the code)
git status
git commit -m "Add @function in file7"
git push -u origin my_new_branch
(wait for unit tests to complete)
(if all unit tests pass, then do these)
git checkout master
git pull origin master
git merge my_new_branch
git push origin master
(now time to delete my_new_branch)
git branch -d my_new_branch
git branch -a
git push origin --delete my_new_branch
Got to say, you are a natural teacher. Very nice explanations, good pace, engaging and easy to follow. One of the best tutorials available on youtube!! Thank you so much :)
The Odin Project brought me here and as an actual NOOB, I am totally lost.
You are lost in which part? You wanna help?
I'm from The Odin Project and I'm learning Git for the first time too
@@marymad4203 me too, i got so lost, i cant seem to find the .gitignore or after touching it, also hard to follow the steps without actually doing it as he speaks
@@andikanakpan8436 I know, it happens sometimes, is normal. You can focus on git init, clone, status, add and commit for now, just to familiarize with git workflow. And the others commands you can learn after you learn these above. I hope it helps you :)
Im stuck on this part as well. Would anyone like to connect on discord and work together?
I strongly recommend this tutorial for everybody who is going to use git, but did not use it before.
Odin Project brought me here. Even 5 years this video is still relevant and game changer for git noobs like me. Thanks for sharing your expertise.
Ps: What's the service you are using to show slides? Is it selfhosted?
Thanks to you, I am now on GitHub successfully. Took many times through the video, but no other video made the process clear enough for me tackle it. I'm starting to teach the nieces a few things in electronics and microprocessors. This is going to help greatly on the programming end. Much appreciated.
Thank man, you 're the best instructor in my whole life :)
I really like the narrative and depth of the details. For a beginner, this is much advanced and very clear. Thanks Corey.
This is the best tutorial for Git. Good job! +1 sub
talk about clearing concepts and the last 30 secs to tie it all in. Thank you kind sir, please wear a cape to work.
I know it's been several years since these Git videos came out but I wanted to thank you for them, as they have made a big impact on my comfort level with Git for day-to-day development work in my team. I'm not afraid of Git anymore and I can use it with confidence. Great examples and your clear speaking voice made the material accessible for me. Thanks a bunch, Corey!!
I was seeing which video should i watch to know about GIT, Fortunately i landed here.
I only downloaded first video, after watching 1st one, my soul forced me to download and watch all videos. Today is 31/10/2020. Thank you sir.
Wow!!! I love this guy! Please be my professor.
Strongly recommended for git beginners..what a great tutorial
Best Git tutorial video I've seen. Thanks!
This should be a must watch for anyone that wants to learn Git! Well done Corey!!!
I think I've officially hit the "wtf is going on" part of learning... Not sure I'm even learning anything, honestly.
same here
me 2
Mash house ya that wud be great. Git makes no sense to me
Likely because you guys haven't stumbled into the problems git solves.
Sorry you feel this way! Learning this stuff, as with anything you're learning for the first time, can be frustrating. Hope me offering some advice isn't seen as presumptuous on my part. In the wild, git is used primarily on teams collaborating on code, but you can use it on your own personal projects to keep track of changes. If I were you, I'd try to start a small project - just something with a few lines of code - and then head over to GitHub. From there, create an account, set up a repository, and commit your code to that repository. Of course, you need to initialize your local repository and "connect" it to the remote one you've set up on GitHub as well. This tutorial gives you most of the tools to do that, but you'll also probably need to Google around a bit.
God bless you. Your teachings are example for many aspirant who would love to share their technical knowledge through online. Excellent teaching skills and very important session on git. Thank you so much.
I have to say, your videos are so useful and you have such a good way of explaining and teaching different concepts, subjects and how to's. I have watched and used quite a few of your videos, and found them so helpful and educational. This channel is such a great resource for anyone trying learn more about any of the subjects you have videos about. Thank you for being such an educator and lifesaver!
Единственный нормальный видос для новичка. Автор молодец! Спасибо за доступную и полную инфу!
6:04 How did you get out of/clear the user manual from terminal? Answer: press "q".
The best tutorial on git . I would recommend beginners to watch this.
Thanks a million ! This was very detailed.
The best git tutorial I ever found on youtube.
This is the Best tutorial I've seen so far on Git.... Thank you !
exactly, i have seen tons of videos on youtube but none of them explained as good as this channel
Corey Schafer is the coolest programmer there in on RUclips. Very helpful videos man. The best part of your videos is that they're able to create the bigger picture. One only needs to add in the details in their journey to master the topic. This is a remarkable feature of all your videos. Kudos bro.
Thanks, Shihab!
Best Video in simplified form. Please keep posting simple but powerful videos. This video shows that no. of views doesn't define the goodness of a video.
+binoy deka Thank you for the kind words!
Excellent to the point lecture. I recommend everyone this video as it covers all the necessary git commands with great explanation. Thank you so much.
I get an error when I push my cloned repository ...
remote: error: refusing to update checked out branch: refs/heads/master
remote: error: By default, updating the current branch in a non-bare repository
remote: is denied, because it will make the index and work tree inconsistent
remote: with what you pushed, and will require 'git reset --hard' to match
remote: the work tree to HEAD.
remote:
remote: You can set the 'receive.denyCurrentBranch' configuration variable
remote: to 'ignore' or 'warn' in the remote repository to allow pushing into
remote: its current branch; however, this is not recommended unless you
remote: arranged to update its work tree to match what you pushed in some
remote: other way.
remote:
remote: To squelch this message and still keep the default behaviour, set
remote: 'receive.denyCurrentBranch' configuration variable to 'refuse'.
To /home/alvise/clone1/../Git_test
! [remote rejected] master -> master (branch is currently checked out)
error: failed to push some refs to '/home/alvise/clone1/../Git_test'
Any idea?
I even try git reset --hard
Thanks a lot.....
By the way awesome video...
I got the same error too
i got the same and could not resolve
I'm guessing but it might be an artifact that for the sake of this tutorial we were messing with master branch on both the remote repo and and the clone repo. In general this is not good practice. Branching is a beast unto itself.
This did the trick for me:
"git config receive.denyCurrentBranch ignore" (case sensitive).
I never regret watching your videos. You are just so brilliant. Thank you as always
I usually don't comment but THIS IS JUST AMAZINGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG Tutorial. THANKS A LOT....................
this was indeed quite fast but helped a lot on building that little memory for the git commands and real git workflows, thank you for helping on our understanding of this awesome tool and congrats for the awesome video :)
It has become a habit of mine to watch Corey's video in free time instead of Netflix.
Thank you Thank you thank you so much , you explained each and every thing about git in smoothly way . I like to interact with CLI rather than GUI and tutorial is perfect for me .
Thank you so much sir 🙏🙏🙏
From India 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳.
My brain is so slow that I had to watch your video on 0.75 speed to fully grasp what you were saying.
One needs experience and talent to make a good presentation. Corey, you have both.
Thanks!
Spent 3 months trying to get git installed properly and ended up giving up. Watched this 30 minute tutorial and now it is set up properly. Who knew?
Very good git tutorial. As a beginner, I benefited a lot from the clear, concise and logical explanation of the git workflow presented in this video!
No one before had explained me in a so clear and straightforward way what git is and how it works. Many thanks Corey, you're a great teacher. Your videos on Python have also been very useful for me, and I just hope you add some C++ tutorials too :) Thanks again!
New to git and coding.Super useful tutorial for beginners like me.God bless you!!!
Thanks again Corey! This video was very helpful! There was a lot of information thrown out in this video. I was feeling overwhelmed at first, but after taking a break and giving my mind time to rest and absorb what I saw, I rewatched the video again and this time everything clicked! So for the viewers that watch this video, I would recommend watch it once, then take a break and rewatch it until it sinks in. This is a very valuable and powerful lesson.
I think the difficulty of teaching something as complex as Git is deciding, "Should I /explain/ how this feature works or should I just /show/ how it works." I think you do a good job of balancing these two. Hopefully further videos will help explain the how in more detail!
Best I have seen so far about git. Short and clean samples. Simultaneously I followed your steps and did on my own, and that is what I recommend to understand how that works. Don't only watch, instead watch and try on your own. Thank you Corey!
Corey, thats a superb tutorial on GIT. To the point and useful yet powerful
Very nice video, nice and simple to understand example. excellent job.. keep posting such videos..
Really - handy,clear -concise and to the point explanation.
Wow. This is so abstract from the perspective of a rookie, and yet, so clear. Why? Corey uses the simplest possible examples at every step, has code ready to change, makes the simplest possible changes, explains everything he is doing, often before he does it and again after he does it. He does not race through everything, hoping to show us how fast or easy some system is or how clever he is. It's so clear, I was able to deduce some properties of git that he didn't even tackle in his exposition. I absolutely agree with Adrian Wilk: Go through the entire video even if you plan to work with git only locally. No matter what you're doing, take the time to study every video CS makes that has any bearing on your goals. NOBODY DOES IT BETTER. Theres no FOO or BAR here. Instead he names the remote repository "origin" to clarify git's checkout and push commands, showing file changes at every step with appropriate commands. Most of the explanatory video on the web is too basic for me now. Why? BECAUSE OF COREY SHAFER. Good morning Corey! I sure could use a video on using slightly advanced query objects in Django to work with related tables. I'm raising your monthly stipend 50%.
Best tutorial on git. I appreciate the discussion on workflow!
I can't resist myself from paying the fees(this is not donating because you are the donor Corey!!).Thank you very much.
Outstanding session for me as i have just started working on Git
If our tutor shows us this in class instead of trying to explain it himself this would be so much easier
@Corey Schafer, you're a wonderful teacher! I have learned so much from each one of your videos that I've watched. Sincere thanks and please keep sharing your knowledge. Best wishes, just another fan
fk it! Time to binge watch you entire channel.
Hope you become a prof someday... those are some pretty great teaching skills you got there
The best as always Mr Corey ! because of you , I understood the OOP in python , and now I understood exactly how the git and command lines work ! Thanks again Sir!
This video completely saved me for the git section of my class. You are the man Corey. Keep em coming.
Right to the point ! Excellent short and concise video
very well explained...thank you :)
Thankfully stumbled across this video, though used git earlier was never closely practicing git bash commands but used git extensions and k diff to resolve conflicts but now using gitlab and git bash more often makes me wonder how have I survived and guided many professionals to swim across the git channel as they anxiously noted what I did
Thank you @Corey Schafer, for the great video as these are the most required. Will make notes and probably stick on the clip board for quick use and post its on desk;
Got here from The Odin Project. Thanks TOP
Your explanation is so simple. Thank you very much for this video.
Such a nice and comprehensible tutorial. I've struggled quite a lot to understand how to use git. Thank you so much for your effort, Corey! :)
Very good, Videos with a bit of practice help to get a good understanding, Thankyou
GIt on fast track. Watching your videos == reading 2 to 3 books. Thank you Corey.
Thanks for making us feel git is so easy , Corey !!
Hi Corey, can we skip pushing branch to remote if we don't intend to share it with the others?
This is a great tutorial video, the best Git one I ever saw. Congrats to you Corey! I could finally understand what I was doing wrong
Thank you from Colombia, the odin project has sent me here :)
me too :)
Just amazing . May be I am falling in love with your way of teaching . I thought I have learned these basics in bits and pieces with the stackoverflow e.t.c but no I learned them after seeing this video . You're the best Corey . You fail to disappoint the beginners like me :)
Just want to say that you are the man!!
The best video tutoial on Git Command line on youtube. Great teaching. thank you Corey :)