Why? you may ask
- Well i know that you are probably good programmer and organized person, and you always use to give a second look before pushing something - to make sure the things are intact, but, somehow, sometimes, after pushing the commit (you checked before all and over!) - you find yourself looking at embarrassing typo you mysteriously missed while checking.
So, what to do now? One way is to start all the thing again from the beginning (new branch, merge changes, new PR etc... ), but is it the only way?
Fortunately (unlike real life) - there is a way to rewrite history - the rebase command!
So, in case you found a typo - all you have to do is:
1. commit again (git commit -am "fixing typo")
2. run
git rebase -i HEAD~2
(because you want to squash 2 commits)3. after running this command you will present with following screen: (in windows you need to press 'i' for enter into 'insert' mode)
5. (windows) press ESC(for exiting 'insert' mode)
6. (windows) type :wq to save changes and quit
8. in linux you just press CTRL + X
After selecting which commit to squash, you will present with screen where you can reformat the message of single commit you about to generate. You can just leave the message of original one and comment the others with '#'
7. run
git push -f origin your-pr-branch-name
Now, look at your remote repo "commits" log: no traces of embarrassing typo, just one clean commit!
Imagine you could replay this way the world history and, for example, prevent the WW2... could be great, right?
Thats it,
Hope i helped someone in my situation
See you in my next post!
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