Fixed some markdown formatting issuses

This commit is contained in:
Leo Rudberg 2014-11-25 13:47:03 -06:00
parent b7f4ca7ea8
commit 0e42f4c928

View File

@ -341,8 +341,8 @@ $ git push
Stashing takes the dirty state of your working directory and saves it on a stack of unfinished changes that you can reapply at any time.
Let's say you've been doing some work in your git repo, but you want to pull from the remote.
Since you have dirty (uncommited) changes to some files, you are not able to run 'git pull'.
Instead, you can run 'git stash' to save your changes onto a stack!
Since you have dirty (uncommited) changes to some files, you are not able to run `git pull`.
Instead, you can run `git stash` to save your changes onto a stack!
```bash
$ git stash
@ -353,10 +353,11 @@ Saved working directory and index state \
```
Now you can pull!
```bash
git pull
```
...changes apply...
`...changes apply...`
Now check that everything is OK
@ -366,8 +367,9 @@ $ git status
nothing to commit, working directory clean
```
You can see what 'hunks' you've stashed so far:
Since the 'hunks' are stored in a Last-In-First-Out stack our most recent change will be at top
You can see what "hunks" you've stashed so far using `git stash list`.
Since the "hunks" are stored in a Last-In-First-Out stack, our most recent change will be at top.
```bash
$ git stash list
stash@{0}: WIP on master: 049d078 added the index file
@ -375,7 +377,8 @@ stash@{1}: WIP on master: c264051 Revert "added file_size"
stash@{2}: WIP on master: 21d80a5 added number to log
```
Now let's apply our dirty changes back by popping them off the stack
Now let's apply our dirty changes back by popping them off the stack.
```bash
$ git stash pop
# On branch master
@ -386,6 +389,7 @@ $ git stash pop
# modified: lib/simplegit.rb
#
```
`git stash apply` does the same thing
Now you're ready to get back to work on your stuff!