- Sumith1896
Git is a distributed revision control software. Git was initially designed and developed by Linus Torvalds for Linux
Having infinite version of the same file.
#CS101_nostalgia
...the purpose Git was designed to serve. When you have a Microsoft Word file, you either overwrite every saved file with a new save, or you save multiple versions. With Git, you don’t have to. It keeps “snapshots” of every point in time in the project’s history, so you can never lose or overwrite it.
In case things go wrong, revert back to the most recent working version
1. Installation
$ sudo apt-get install git
2. Personalization
$ git config --global user.name "Lorem Ipsum"
$ git config --global user.email loremipsum@foo.com
3. Initialization of a project
$ mkdir itsp-project
$ cd itsp-project
$ git init
Repository: A directory or storage space where your projects can live. Sometimes GitHub users shorten this to “repo.” It can be local to a folder on your computer, or it can be a storage space on GitHub or another online host. You can keep code files, text files, image files, you name it, inside a repository.
Commit: This is the command that gives Git its power. When you commit, you are taking a “snapshot” of your repository at that point in time, giving you a checkpoint to which you can re-evaluate or restore your project to any previous state.
Branch: How do multiple people work on a project at the same time without Git getting them confused? Usually, they “branch off” of the main project with their own versions full of changes they themselves have made. After they’re done, it’s time to “merge” that branch back with the “master,” the main directory of the project.
git init: Initializes a new Git repository. Until you run this command inside a repository or directory, it’s just a regular folder. Only after you input this does it accept further Git commands.
git config: Short for “configure,” this is most useful when you’re setting up Git for the first time.
git help: Forgot a command? Type this into the command line to bring up the 21 most common git commands. You can also be more specific and type “git help init” or another term to figure out how to use and configure a specific git command.
git status: Check the status of your repository. See which files are inside it, which changes still need to be committed, and which branch of the repository you’re currently working on.
git add: This does not add new files to your repository. Instead, it brings new files to Git’s attention. After you add files, they’re included in Git’s “snapshots” of the repository.
git commit: Git’s most important command. After you make any sort of change, you input this in order to take a “snapshot” of the repository. Usually it goes git commit -m “Message here.” The -m indicates that the following section of the command should be read as a message.
git branch: Working with multiple collaborators and want to make changes on your own? This command will let you build a new branch, or timeline of commits, of changes and file additions that are completely your own. Your title goes after the command. If you wanted a new branch called “cats,” you’d type git branch cats.
git checkout: Literally allows you to “check out” a repository that you are not currently inside. This is a navigational command that lets you move to the repository you want to check. You can use this command as git checkout master to look at the master branch, or git checkout cats to look at another branch.
git diff: See the changes that you have made.
git push: If you’re working on your local computer, and want your commits to be visible online on GitHub as well, you “push” the changes up to GitHub with this command.
git pull: If you’re working on your local computer and want the most up-to-date version of your repository to work with, you “pull” the changes down from GitHub with this command.
git merge: When you’re done working on a branch, you can merge your changes back to the master branch, which is visible to all collaborators. git merge cats would take all the changes you made to the “cats” branch and add them to the master.
Features specific to GitHub
GitHub is a web-based Git repository hosting service, which offers source code management functionality of Git as well as adding its own features. Unlike Git, which is strictly a command-line tool, GitHub provides a web-based graphical interface. It also provides access control and several collaboration features such as wikis, task management, and bug tracking and feature requests for every project.
1. Create an account in GitHub
2. Create a new repo
3. to get a local copy
$ git clone
4. Add the files locally.
5. Commit any changes.
6. Push it to GitHub
Official GitHub hello-world tutorial here
Fork - Own a copy of else's project.
Pull request - Send in your contribution for review.
Other features - follow, star, watch, etc.
git rebase : play with the history
Let's try it out!
Ta-da you are an open-source contributor
A symbolic computational library
What?
Mathematical library that handles symbols than numbers. So you can do things like
integrate(sin(x) + cos(x)**2, x)
and things much more complicated
A simple pythonic open source library alternative for Wolfram
import sympy
And as simple as
Example: Laplace Transforms
>>> from sympy.integrals import laplace_transform
>>> from sympy.abc import t, s, a
>>> laplace_transform(t**a, t, s)
(s**(-a)*gamma(a + 1)/s, 0, -re(a) < 1)
Core capabilities|Polynomials |Calculus
Solving equations |Combinatorics |Discrete math
Matrices |Geometric Algebra| Geometry |Plotting |Physics
Statistics| Cryptography| Parsing |Printing
"People who say alcohol is addictive, probably haven't tried their hands at FOSS." - Ranveer
Happy forking
Catch me at
Github : Sumith1896
Facebook : sumith.iitb
Email : sumith1896@gmail.com
* Godspeed *