Checklists¶
Make use of Git¶
- [ ] Make your project version controlled by initialising a Git repository in its directory using - git init.
- [ ] Add and commit all your files to the repository using - git add .then- git commit.
- [ ] Continue to add and commit changes as your project progresses. Stage the changes in specific files to be committed with - git add filename, and add messages to your commits.- [ ] Each commit should make one simple change. 
- [ ] No generated files committed. 
- [ ] Commit messages are meaningful, with a ~50 character summary at the top. 
- [ ] Commit messages are in the present tense and imperative. 
 
- [ ] Develop new features on their own branches, which you can create via - git checkout -b branch_nameand switch between via- git checkout branch_name.- [ ] Branches have informative names. 
- [ ] Master branch is kept clean. 
- [ ] Each branch has a single purpose and only changes related to that purpose are made on it. 
 
- [ ] Once features are complete merge their branches into the master branch by switching to the feature branch and running - git merge master.- [ ] Merge other’s changes into your work frequently. 
- [ ] When dealing with merge conflicts make sure you fully understand both versions before trying to resolve them. 
 
Contribute to someone else’s project¶
- [ ] Clone their project’s repository from GitHub - git clone repository_url.
- [ ] Make and commit changes. 
- [ ] Push your changes to you GitHub version of the project. 
- [ ] Make use of issues to discuss possible changes to a project. 
- [ ] Make pull requests on GitHub to share your work. - [ ] Clearly explain the changes you’ve made and why in your pull request. 
 
