Manual Version Control
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Version control reduces mental clutter.
Version control allows for easier reversion.
Version control allows multiple people to work in parallel.
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Automated Version Control
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Setting Up Git
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Use git config to configure a user name, email address, editor, and other preferences once per machine.
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Creating a Repository
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Tracking Changes
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git status shows the status of a repository.
Files can be stored in a project’s working directory (which users see), the staging area (where the next commit is being built up) and the local repository (where commits are permanently recorded).
git add puts files in the staging area.
git commit saves the staged content as a new commit in the local repository.
Always write a log message when committing changes.
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Ignoring Things
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Remotes in GitHub
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A local Git repository can be connected to one or more remote repositories.
Use the HTTPS protocol to connect to remote repositories until you have learned how to set up SSH.
git push copies changes from a local repository to a remote repository.
git pull copies changes from a remote repository to a local repository.
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Exploring History
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The GitHub website will show a list of changes, and show the differences between commits.
We can download or copy from old versions of files.
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Collaborating
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Conflicts
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Conflicts occur when two or more people change the same file(s) at the same time.
The version control system does not allow people to overwrite each other’s changes blindly, but highlights conflicts so that they can be resolved.
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Open Science
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Licensing
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People who incorporate GPL’d software into their own software must make their software also open under the GPL license; most other open licenses do not require this.
The Creative Commons family of licenses allow people to mix and match requirements and restrictions on attribution, creation of derivative works, further sharing, and commercialization.
People who are not lawyers should not try to write licenses from scratch.
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Citation
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