companydirectorylist.com  Global Business Directories and Company Directories
Search Business,Company,Industry :


Country Lists
USA Company Directories
Canada Business Lists
Australia Business Directories
France Company Lists
Italy Company Lists
Spain Company Directories
Switzerland Business Lists
Austria Company Directories
Belgium Business Directories
Hong Kong Company Lists
China Business Lists
Taiwan Company Lists
United Arab Emirates Company Directories


Industry Catalogs
USA Industry Directories














  • What is the difference between HEAD^ and HEAD~ in Git?
    Simply put, for the first level of parentage (ancestry, inheritance, lineage, etc ) HEAD^ and HEAD~ both point to the same commit, which is (located) one parent above the HEAD (commit)
  • git HEAD~ vs HEAD^ vs HEAD@ {} Explained with Examples
    Now that we are familiar with the commands to get the parent of any commit, lets start using HEAD^, HEAD~ in our examples to explain the difference The special characters i e tilde (~), caret (^) and at-sign (@) are to be used with a particular commit ID to get respective details
  • Why isnt head -1 equivalent with head -n -1 but instead it . . . - linux
    In head +1 or head 1, the +1 or 1 would be taken as file names, however A double dash -- or --something also has a distinct meaning, by itself (--) it stops option processing, and when followed by something else, it marks a GNU style long option
  • What is Git HEAD? A Practical Guide Explained with Examples
    Git HEAD~1 means the previous commit of the last commit Contrary to using the caret, git HEAD~ or HEAD with a tilde is simpler to understand as it references the previous commit of a specific branch
  • Git - git-reset Documentation
    The HEAD@{1} is a special notation for the commit that HEAD used to be at prior to the original reset commit (1 change ago) See git-reflog [1] for more details
  • What is difference between git reset --hard HEAD~1 and git reset . . .
    When using git reset --hard HEAD~1 you will lose all uncommited changes and all untracked files in addition to the changes introduced in the last commit The changes won't stay in your working tree so doing a git status command will tell you that you don't have any changes in your repository
  • What is HEAD in Git? - Stack Overflow
    Curious that there's practically a 1:1 correspondence between 'heads' and (named) 'branches' (see git ls-remote as evidence) and yet the definition of 'HEAD' seems so hard to pin down The documentation for git branch says simply that HEAD is, in effect, "the tip of the current branch"
  • Sports – HEAD
    Since 2007 HEAD has partnered with Cool Earth to protect rainforests HEAD launches more sustainable racquet on Earth Day This April 22 is Earth Day, our annual reminder that we all have a role to play in protecting our planet HEAD´s pioneering commitment to sustainability and performance




Business Directories,Company Directories
Business Directories,Company Directories copyright ©2005-2012 
disclaimer