Standalone HTML page that organizes Git's commands by what they affect. Built as I was learning git and trying to understand it. It's proved useful to others in the same endeavor.
Contributors
Comments and pull requests welcome.
To add a translation
- Determine the 2-letter language code (ISO 639-1). See the existing files in
git-cheatsheet/lang. - Create a new JSON file with the name of the code in
git-cheatsheet/lang. Choose one of the other languages as a starting point. - Write your translation. Use the exact identical property keys in the JSON structure. Only change the values.
- Add a link for users to choose the translation. In
git-cheatsheet.html, insert (alphabetically) a new line that looks like:
<a class="lang" data-lang="vi" data-docs="Vietnamese translation by trgiangdo">vn</a>
- Add your name to the README.md above.
- Test manually
- Create a pull request. Give me a couple days to reply, but then feel free to write.
- Once it's merged, tell people about it.
Keep the PR restricted to changes related to the translation.
Development
Files are in the src folder. To see it locally:
yarn installto install dependenciesyarn testto run the testsyarn buildto transpile.yarn startoryarn start-dockerto serve. The latter uses a Docker container.- Open
http://127.0.0.1:8080/git-cheatsheet.htmlto view the page
CI is on Github Actions.
Deploy
Legacy
Use FTP to upload to NDP Software
Exceptions caught and logged on Rollbar (private).
AWS Deployment
rsync --progress -e "ssh -i ~/.ssh/LightsailDefaultKey-us-west-2.pem" ./git-cheatsheet.htm bitnami@52.36.92.53:/home/bitnami/htdocs/ rsync --progress -e "ssh -i ~/.ssh/LightsailDefaultKey-us-west-2.pem" ./git-cheatsheet.html bitnami@52.36.92.53:/home/bitnami/htdocs/ rsync -avcz --progress -e "ssh -i ~/.ssh/LightsailDefaultKey-us-west-2.pem" ./git-cheatsheet bitnami@52.36.92.53:/home/bitnami/htdocs/ rsync -avcz --progress -e "ssh -i ~/.ssh/LightsailDefaultKey-us-west-2.pem" ../agile_methods bitnami@52.36.92.53:/home/bitnami/htdocs/
FAQ
Are there any "features"?
You can navigate over different "locations" and commands with the mouse, arrow keys, or vi-like keystrokes.
Why is it called "Cheat Sheet"?
It's pretty silly, actually. I had a little SEO juice from a couple other real cheat sheets, so I thought I'd just leverage that term. In retrospect, I think this was an okay tactic, as it brought people to the page.
Like it or have ideas?
If you like this and would like me to do more intereactions like this, send me an email... or patreon.com/ndp
License
Copyright (c) 2013-2024 Andrew J. Peterson, NDP Software
