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GitHub Cheat Sheet

A collection of cool hidden and not so hidden features of Git and GitHub. This cheat sheet was inspired by Zach Holman's Git and GitHub Secrets talk at Aloha Ruby Conference 2012 (slides) and his More Git and GitHub Secrets talk at WDCNZ 2013 (slides).

Shortlink: http://git.io/sheet

Read this in other languages: English, 한국어, 日本語, 简体中文.

Table of Contents

  • GitHub
  • Ignore Whitespace
  • Adjust Tab Space
  • Commit History by Author
  • Cloning a Repository
  • Branch
  • Gists
  • Git.io
  • Keyboard Shortcuts
  • Line Highlighting in Repositories
  • Closing Issues via Commit Messages
  • Cross-Link Issues
  • Locking Conversations
  • CI Status on Pull Requests
  • Syntax Highlighting in Markdown Files
  • Emojis
  • Images/GIFs
  • Quick Quoting
  • Pasting Clipboard Image to Comments
  • Quick Licensing
  • Task Lists
  • Relative Links
  • Metadata and Plugin Support for GitHub Pages
  • Viewing YAML Metadata in your Documents
  • Rendering Tabular Data
  • Revert a Pull Request
  • Diffs
  • Hub
  • Contributing Guidelines
  • Octicons
  • GitHub Resources
  • Git
  • Remove All Deleted Files from the Working Tree
  • Previous Branch
  • Stripspace
  • Checking out Pull Requests
  • Empty Commits
  • Styled Git Status
  • Styled Git Log
  • Git Query
  • Merged Branches
  • Fixup and Autosquash
  • Web Server for Browsing Local Repositories
  • Git Configurations
  • Git Resources

    GitHub

    Ignore Whitespace

    Adding ?w=1 to any diff URL will remove any changes only in whitespace, enabling you to see only that code that has changed.

    Diff without whitespace

    Read more about GitHub secrets.

    Adjust Tab Space

    Adding ?ts=4 to a diff or file URL will display tab characters as 4 spaces wide instead of the default 8. The number after ts can be adjusted to suit your preference. This does not work on Gists, or raw file views, but a Chrome or Opera extension can automate this.

    Here is a Go source file before adding ?ts=4:

    Before, tab space example

    ...and this is after adding ?ts=4:

    After, tab space example

    Commit History by Author

    To view all commits on a repo by author add ?author={user} to the URL.

    https://github.com/rails/rails/commits/master?author=dhh
    

    DHH commit history

    Read more about the differences between commits views.

    Cloning a Repository

    When cloning a repository the .git can be left off the end.

    $ git clone https://github.com/tiimgreen/github-cheat-sheet

    Read more about the Git clone command.

    ###Branch

    Compare all Branches to Another Branch

    If you go to the repo's Branches page, next to the Commits button:

    https://github.com/{user}/{repo}/branches
    

    ... you would see a list of all branches which are not merged into the main branch.

    From here you can access the compare page or delete a branch with a click of a button.

    Compare branches not merged into master in rails/rails repo - https://github.com/rails/rails/branches

    Comparing Branches

    To use GitHub to compare branches, change the URL to look like this:

    https://github.com/{user}/{repo}/compare/{range}
    

    Where {range} = master...4-1-stable

    For example:

    https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/master...4-1-stable
    

    Rails branch compare example

    {range} can be changed to things like:

    https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/master@{1.day.ago}...master
    https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/master@{2014-10-04}...master
    

    Dates are in the format YYYY-DD-MM

    Another compare example

    Branches can also be compared in diff and patch views:

    https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/master...4-1-stable.diff
    https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/master...4-1-stable.patch
    

    Read more about comparing commits across time.

    Compare Branches across Forked Repositories

    To use GitHub to compare branches across forked repositories, change the URL to look like this:

    https://github.com/{user}/{repo}/compare/{foreign-user}:{branch}...{own-branch}
    

    For example:

    https://github.com/rails/rails/compare/byroot:master...master
    

    Forked branch compare

    Gists

    Gists are an easy way to work with small bits of code without creating a fully fledged repository.

    Gist

    Add .pibb to the end of any Gist URL (like this) in order to get the HTML only version suitable for embedding in any other site.

    Gists can be treated as a repository so they can be cloned like any other:

    $ git clone https://gist.github.com/tiimgreen/10545817

    Gists

    This means you also can modify and push updates to Gists:

    $ git commit
    $ git push
    Username for 'https://gist.github.com': 
    Password for 'https://tiimgreen@gist.github.com': 

    However, Gists do not support directories. All files need to be added to the repository root.
    Read more about creating Gists.

    Git.io

    Git.io is a simple URL shortener for GitHub.

    Git.io

    You can also use it via pure HTTP using Curl:

    $ curl -i http://git.io -F "url=https://github.com/..."
    HTTP/1.1 201 Created
    Location: http://git.io/abc123
    
    $ curl -i http://git.io/abc123
    HTTP/1.1 302 Found
    Location: https://github.com/...

    Read more about Git.io.

    Keyboard Shortcuts

    When on a repository page, keyboard shortcuts allow you to navigate easily.

    • Pressing t will bring up a file explorer.
    • Pressing w will bring up the branch selector.
    • Pressing s will focus the search field for the current repository. Pressing Backspace to delete the “This repository” pill changes the field to search all of GitHub.
    • Pressing l will edit labels on existing Issues.
    • Pressing y when looking at a file (e.g. https://github.com/tiimgreen/github-cheat-sheet/blob/master/README.md) will change your URL to one which, in effect, freezes the page you are looking at. If this code changes, you will still be able to see what you saw at that current time.

    To see all of the shortcuts for the current page press ?:

    Keyboard shortcuts

    Read more about search syntax you can use.

    Line Highlighting in Repositories

    Either adding #L52 to the end of a code file URL or simply clicking the line number will highlight that line number.

    It also works with ranges, e.g. #L53-L60, to select ranges, hold shift and click two lines:

    https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/master/activemodel/lib/active_model.rb#L53-L60
    

    Line Highlighting

    Closing Issues via Commit Messages

    If a particular commit fixes an issue, any of the keywords fix/fixes/fixed, close/closes/closed or resolve/resolves/resolved, followed by the issue number, will close the issue once it is committed to the master branch.

    $ git commit -m "Fix screwup, fixes #12"

    This closes the issue and references the closing commit.

    Closing Repo

    Read more about closing Issues via commit messages.

    Cross-Link Issues

    If you want to link to another issue in the same repository, simply type hash # then the issue number, and it will be auto-linked.

    To link to an issue in another repository, {user}/{repo}#ISSUE_NUMBER e.g. tiimgreen/toc#12.

    Cross-Link Issues

    Locking Conversations

    Pull Requests and Issues can now be locked by owners or collaborators of the repo.

    Lock conversation

    This means that users who are not collaborators on the project will no longer be able to comment.

    Comments locked

    Read more about locking conversations.

    CI Status on Pull Requests

    If set up correctly, every time you receive a Pull Request, Travis CI will build that Pull Request just like it would every time you make a new commit. Read more about how to get started with Travis CI.

    Travis CI status

    Read more about the commit status API.

    Syntax Highlighting in Markdown Files

    For example, to syntax highlight Ruby code in your Markdown files write:

    ```ruby
    require 'tabbit'
    table = Tabbit.new('Name', 'Email')
    table.add_row('Tim Green', 'tiimgreen@gmail.com')
    puts table.to_s
    ```
    

    This will produce:

    require 'tabbit'
    table = Tabbit.new('Name', 'Email')
    table.add_row('Tim Green', 'tiimgreen@gmail.com')
    puts table.to_s

    GitHub uses Linguist to perform language detection and syntax highlighting. You can find out which keywords are valid by perusing the languages YAML file.

    Read more about GitHub Flavored Markdown.

    Emojis

    Emojis can be added to Pull Requests, Issues, commit messages, repository descriptions, etc. using :name_of_emoji:.

    The full list of supported Emojis on GitHub can be found at emoji-cheat-sheet.com or scotch-io/All-Github-Emoji-Icons.

    The top 5 used Emojis on GitHub are:

    1. :shipit:
    2. :sparkles:
    3. :-1:
    4. :+1:
    5. :clap:

    Images/GIFs

    Images and GIFs can be added to comments, READMEs etc.:

    ![Alt Text](http://www.sheawong.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/keephatin.gif)
    

    Raw images from the repo can be used by calling them directly.:

    ![Alt Text](https://github.com/{user}/{repo}/raw/master/path/to/image.gif)
    

    Peter don't care

    All images are cached on GitHub, so if your host goes down, the image will remain available.

    Embedding Images in GitHub Wiki

    There are multiple ways of embedding images in Wiki pages. There's the standard Markdown syntax (shown above). But there's also a syntax that allows things like specifying the height or width of the image:

    [[ http://www.sheawong.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/keephatin.gif | height = 100px ]]

    Which produces:

    Just a screenshot

    Quick Quoting

    When on a comment thread and you want to quote something someone previously said, highlight the text and press r, this will copy it into your text box in the block-quote format.

    Quick Quote

    Read more about quick quoting.

    Pasting Clipboard Image to Comments

    (Works on Chrome browsers only)

    After taking a screenshot and adding it to the clipboard (mac: cmd-ctrl-shift-4), you can simply paste (cmd-v / ctrl-v) the image into the comment section and it will be auto-uploaded to github.

    Pasting Clipboard Image to Comments

    Read more about issue attachments.

    Quick Licensing

    When creating a repository, GitHub gives you the option of adding in a pre-made license:

    License

    You can also add them to existing repositories by creating a new file through the web interface. When the name LICENSE is typed in you will get an option to use a template:

    License

    Also works for .gitignore.

    Read more about open source licensing.

    Task Lists

    In Issues and Pull requests check boxes can be added with the following syntax (notice the space):

    - [ ] Be awesome
    - [ ] Prepare dinner
      - [ ] Research recipe
      - [ ] Buy ingredients
      - [ ] Cook recipe
    - [ ] Sleep
    

    Task List

    When they are clicked, they will be updated in the pure Markdown:

    - [x] Be awesome
    - [ ] Prepare dinner
      - [x] Research recipe
      - [x] Buy ingredients
      - [ ] Cook recipe
    - [ ] Sleep
    

    Read more about task lists.

    Task Lists in Markdown Documents

    In full Markdown documents read-only checklists can now be added using the following syntax:

    - [ ] Mercury
    - [x] Venus
    - [x] Earth
      - [x] Moon
    - [x] Mars
      - [ ] Deimos
      - [ ] Phobos
    
    • Mercury
    • Venus
    • Earth
      • Moon
    • Mars
      • Deimos
      • Phobos

    Read more about task lists in markdown documents.

    Relative Links

    Relative links are recommended in your Markdown files when linking to internal content.

    [Link to a header](#awesome-section)
    [Link to a file](docs/readme)

    Absolute links have to be updated whenever the URL changes (e.g. repository renamed, username changed, project forked). Using relative links makes your documentation easily stand on its own.

    Read more about relative links.

    Metadata and Plugin Support for GitHub Pages

    Within Jekyll pages and posts, repository information is available within the site.github namespace, and can be displayed, for example, using {{ site.github.project_title }}.

    The Jemoji and jekyll-mentions plugins enable emoji and @mentions in your Jekyll posts and pages to work just like you'd expect when interacting with a repository on GitHub.com.

    Read more about repository metadata and plugin support for GitHub Pages.

    Viewing YAML Metadata in your Documents

    Many blogging websites, like Jekyll with GitHub Pages, depend on some YAML-formatted metadata at the beginning of your post. GitHub will render this metadata as a horizontal table, for easier reading

    YAML metadata

    Read more about viewing YAML metadata in your documents.

    Rendering Tabular Data

    GitHub supports rendering tabular data in the form of .csv (comma-separated) and .tsv (tab-separated) files.

    Tabular data

    Read more about rendering tabular data.

    ###Revert a Pull Request After a pull request is merged, you may find it does not help anything or it was a bad decision to merge the pull request.

    You can revert it by clicking the Revert button on the right side of a commit in the pull request page to create a pull request with reverted changes to this specific pull request.

    Revert button

    Read more about reverting pull requests

    Diffs

    Rendered Prose Diffs

    Commits and pull requests, including rendered documents supported by GitHub (e.g. Markdown), feature source and rendered views.

    Source / Rendered view

    Click the "rendered" button to see the changes as they'll appear in the rendered document. Rendered prose view is handy when you're adding, removing, and editing text:

    Rendered Prose Diffs

    Read more about rendered prose diffs.

    Diffable Maps

    Any time you view a commit or pull request on GitHub that includes geodata, GitHub will render a visual representation of what was changed.

    Diffable Maps

    Read more about diffable maps.

    Expanding Context in Diffs

    Using the unfold button in the gutter of a diff, you can reveal additional lines of context with a click. You can keep clicking unfold until you've revealed the whole file, and the feature is available anywhere GitHub renders diffs.

    Expanding Context in Diffs

    Read more about expanding context in diffs.

    Diff or Patch of Pull Request

    You can get the diff of a Pull Request by adding a .diff or .patch extension to the end of the URL. For example:

    https://github.com/tiimgreen/github-cheat-sheet/pull/15
    https://github.com/tiimgreen/github-cheat-sheet/pull/15.diff
    https://github.com/tiimgreen/github-cheat-sheet/pull/15.patch
    

    The .diff extension would give you this in plain text:

    diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
    index 88fcf69..8614873 100644
    --- a/README.md
    +++ b/README.md
    @@ -28,6 +28,7 @@ All the hidden and not hidden features of Git and GitHub. This cheat sheet was i
     - [Merged Branches](#merged-branches)
     - [Quick Licensing](#quick-licensing)
     - [TODO Lists](#todo-lists)
    +- [Relative Links](#relative-links)
     - [.gitconfig Recommendations](#gitconfig-recommendations)
         - [Aliases](#aliases)
         - [Auto-correct](#auto-correct)
    @@ -381,6 +382,19 @@ When they are clicked, they will be updated in the pure Markdown:
     - [ ] Sleep
    
    (...)
    

    Rendering and diffing images

    GitHub can display several common image formats, including PNG, JPG, GIF, and PSD. In addition, there are several ways to compare differences between versions of those image formats.

    Diffable PSD

    Read more about rendering and diffing images.

    Hub

    Hub is a command line Git wrapper that gives you extra features and commands that make working with GitHub easier.

    This allows you to do things like:

    $ hub clone tiimgreen/toc

    Check out some more cool commands Hub has to offer.

    Contributing Guidelines

    Adding a CONTRIBUTING file to the root of your repository will add a link to your file when a contributor creates an Issue or opens a Pull Request.

    Contributing Guidelines

    Read more about contributing guidelines.

    Octicons

    GitHubs icons (Octicons) have now been open sourced.

    Octicons

    Read more about GitHub's Octicons

    GitHub Resources

    Title Link
    GitHub Explore https://github.com/explore
    GitHub Blog https://github.com/blog
    GitHub Help https://help.github.com/
    GitHub Training https://training.github.com/
    GitHub Developer https://developer.github.com/

    GitHub Talks

    Title Link
    How GitHub Uses GitHub to Build GitHub https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qyz3jkOBbQY
    Introduction to Git with Scott Chacon of GitHub https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDR433b0HJY
    How GitHub No Longer Works https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gXD1ITW7iZI
    Git and GitHub Secrets https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Foz9yvMkvlA
    More Git and GitHub Secrets https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p50xsL-iVgU

    Git

    Remove All Deleted Files from the Working Tree

    When you delete a lot of files using /bin/rm you can use the following command to remove them from the working tree and from the index, eliminating the need to remove each one individually:

    $ git rm $(git ls-files -d)

    For example:

    $ git status
    On branch master
    Changes not staged for commit:
    	deleted:    a
    	deleted:    c
    	
    $ git rm $(git ls-files -d)
    rm 'a'
    rm 'c'
    
    $ git status
    On branch master
    Changes to be committed:
    	deleted:    a
    	deleted:    c

    Previous Branch

    To move to the previous branch in Git:

    $ git checkout -
    # Switched to branch 'master'
    
    $ git checkout -
    # Switched to branch 'next'
    
    $ git checkout -
    # Switched to branch 'master'

    Read more about Git branching.

    Stripspace

    Git Stripspace:

    • Strips trailing whitespace
    • Collapses newlines
    • Adds newline to end of file

    A file must be passed when calling the command, e.g.:

    $ git stripspace < README.md

    Read more about the Git stripspace command.

    Checking out Pull Requests

    Pull Requests are special branches on the GitHub repository which can be retrieved locally in several ways:

    Retrieve a specific Pull Request and store it temporarily in FETCH_HEAD for quickly diffing or mergeing:

    $ git fetch origin refs/pull/[PR-Number]/head

    Acquire all Pull Request branches as local remote branches by refspec:

    $ git fetch origin '+refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/*'

    Or setup the remote to fetch Pull Requests automatically by adding these corresponding lines in your repository's .git/config:

    [remote "origin"]
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
        url = git@github.com:tiimgreen/github-cheat-sheet.git
    
    [remote "origin"]
        fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
        url = git@github.com:tiimgreen/github-cheat-sheet.git
        fetch = +refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/*
    

    For Fork-based Pull Request contributions, it's useful to checkout a remote branch representing the Pull Request and create a local branch from it:

    $ git checkout pr/42 pr-42

    Or should you work on more repositories, you can globally configure fetching pull requests in the global git config instead.

    git config --global --add remote.origin.fetch "+refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/*"

    This way, you can use the following short commands in all your repositories:

    git fetch origin
    git checkout pr/42

    Read more about checking out pull requests locally.

    Empty Commits

    Commits can be pushed with no code changes by adding --allow-empty:

    $ git commit -m "Big-ass commit" --allow-empty

    Some use-cases for this (that make sense), include:

    • Annotating the start of a new bulk of work or a new feature.
    • Documenting when you make changes to the project that aren't code related.
    • Communicating with people using your repository.
    • The first commit of a repo, as the first commit cannot be rebased later: git commit -m "init repo" --allow-empty.

    It ain't even that trolololol...

    Styled Git Status

    Running:

    $ git status

    Produces:

    git status

    By adding -sb:

    $ git status -sb

    This is produced:

    git status -sb

    Read more about the Git status command.

    Styled Git Log

    Running:

    $ git log --all --graph --pretty=format:'%Cred%h%Creset -%C(auto)%d%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)<%an>%Creset' --abbrev-commit --date=relative

    Produces:

    git log --all --graph --pretty=format:'%Cred%h%Creset -%C(auto)%d%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)<%an>%Creset' --abbrev-commit --date=relative

    Credit to Palesz

    This can be aliased using the instructions found here.

    Read more about the Git log command.

    Git Query

    A Git query allows you to search all your previous commit messages and find the most recent one matching the query.

    $ git show :/query

    Where query (case-sensitive) is the term you want to search, this then finds the last one and gives details on the lines that were changed.

    $ git show :/typo

    git show :/query

    Press q to quit.

    Merged Branches

    Running:

    $ git branch --merged

    Will give you a list of all branches that have been merged into your current branch.

    Conversely:

    $ git branch --no-merged

    Will give you a list of branches that have not been merged into your current branch.

    Read more about the Git branch command.

    Fixup and Autosquash

    If there is something wrong with a previous commit (can be one or more from HEAD), for example abcde, run the following command after you've amended the problem:

    $ git commit --fixup=abcde
    $ git rebase abcde^ --autosquash -i

    Read more about the Git commit command. Read more about the Git rebase command.

    Web Server for Browsing Local Repositories

    Use the Git instaweb command to instantly browse your working repository in gitweb. This command is a simple script to set up gitweb and a web server for browsing the local repository.

    $ git instaweb

    Opens:

    Git instaweb

    Read more about the Git instaweb command.

    Git Configurations

    Your .gitconfig file contains all your Git configurations.

    Aliases

    Aliases are helpers that let you define your own git calls. For example you could set git a to run git add --all.

    To add an alias, either navigate to ~/.gitconfig and fill it out in the following format:

    [alias]
      co = checkout
      cm = commit
      p = push
      # Show verbose output about tags, branches or remotes
      tags = tag -l
      branches = branch -a
      remotes = remote -v
    

    ...or type in the command-line:

    $ git config --global alias.new_alias git_function

    For example:

    $ git config --global alias.cm commit

    For an alias with multiple functions use quotes:

    $ git config --global alias.ac 'add -A . && commit'

    Some useful aliases include:

    Alias Command What to Type
    git cm git commit git config --global alias.cm commit
    git co git checkout git config --global alias.co checkout
    git ac git add . -A git commit git config --global alias.ac '!git add -A && git commit'
    git st git status -sb git config --global alias.st 'status -sb'
    git tags git tag -l git config --global alias.tags 'tag -l'
    git branches git branch -a git config --global alias.branches 'branch -a'
    git cleanup `git branch --merged grep -v '*'
    git remotes git remote -v git config --global alias.remotes 'remote -v'
    git lg git log --color --graph --pretty=format:'%Cred%h%Creset -%C(yellow)%d%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)<%an>%Creset' --abbrev-commit -- git config --global alias.lg "log --color --graph --pretty=format:'%Cred%h%Creset -%C(yellow)%d%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)<%an>%Creset' --abbrev-commit --"

    Some Aliases are taken from @mathiasbynens dotfiles: https://github.com/mathiasbynens/dotfiles/blob/master/.gitconfig

    Auto-Correct

    If you type git comit you will get this:

    $ git comit -m "Message"
    # git: 'comit' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.
    
    # Did you mean this?
    #   commit

    To call commit when comit is typed, just enable auto-correct:

    $ git config --global help.autocorrect 1

    So now you will get this:

    $ git comit -m "Message"
    # WARNING: You called a Git command named 'comit', which does not exist.
    # Continuing under the assumption that you meant 'commit'
    # in 0.1 seconds automatically...

    Color

    To add more color to your Git output:

    $ git config --global color.ui 1

    Read more about the Git config command.

    Git Resources

    Title Link
    Official Git Site http://git-scm.com/
    Official Git Video Tutorials http://git-scm.com/videos
    Code School Try Git http://try.github.com/
    Introductory Reference & Tutorial for Git http://gitref.org/
    Official Git Tutorial http://git-scm.com/docs/gittutorial
    Everyday Git http://git-scm.com/docs/everyday
    Git Immersion http://gitimmersion.com/
    Ry's Git Tutorial http://rypress.com/tutorials/git/index.html
    Git for Designers http://hoth.entp.com/output/git_for_designers.html
    Git for Computer Scientists http://eagain.net/articles/git-for-computer-scientists/
    Git Magic http://www-cs-students.stanford.edu/~blynn/gitmagic/
    GitHub Training Kit http://training.github.com/kit
    Git Visualization Playground http://onlywei.github.io/explain-git-with-d3/#freeplay

    Git Books

    Title Link
    Pragmatic Version Control Using Git http://www.pragprog.com/titles/tsgit/pragmatic-version-control-using-git
    Pro Git http://git-scm.com/book
    Git Internals PluralSight https://github.com/pluralsight/git-internals-pdf
    Git in the Trenches http://cbx33.github.com/gitt/
    Version Control with Git http://www.amazon.com/Version-Control-Git-collaborative-development/dp/1449316387
    Pragmatic Guide to Git http://www.pragprog.com/titles/pg_git/pragmatic-guide-to-git
    Git: Version Control for Everyone http://www.packtpub.com/git-version-control-for-everyone/book

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