Understanding the basics of Git and GitHub [closed]
I don't fully understand the purpose of using Git or Github; I know it helps to keep track of your changes and it's helpful for people collaborating with other people, but I don't collaborate with anybody so I don't know if this would be helpful for me.
I usually work as a web designer/developer but I never have to collaborate. I know in Git you have create, push, commit, create branches etc for every repository but...
What is the difference between Git and GitHub?
Is git saving every repository locally (in the user's machine) and in GitHub?
Can you use Git without GitHub? If yes, what would be the benefit for using GitHub?
How does Git compare to a backup system such as Time Machine?
Is this a manual process, in other words if you don't commit you wont have a new version of the changes made?
If are not collaborating and you are already using a backup system why would you use Git?
Solution 1:
-
What is the difference between Git and GitHub?
Git is a version control system; think of it as a series of snapshots (commits) of your code. You see a path of these snapshots, in which order they where created. You can make branches to experiment and come back to snapshots you took.
GitHub, is a web-page on which you can publish your Git repositories and collaborate with other people.
-
Is Git saving every repository locally (in the user's machine) and in GitHub?
No, it's only local. You can decide to push (publish) some branches on GitHub.
-
Can you use Git without GitHub? If yes, what would be the benefit for using GitHub?
Yes, Git runs local if you don't use GitHub. An alternative to using GitHub could be running Git on files hosted on Dropbox, but GitHub is a more streamlined service as it was made especially for Git.
-
How does Git compare to a backup system such as Time Machine?
It's a different thing, Git lets you track changes and your development process. If you use Git with GitHub, it becomes effectively a backup. However usually you would not push all the time to GitHub, at which point you do not have a full backup if things go wrong. I use git in a folder that is synchronized with Dropbox.
-
Is this a manual process, in other words if you don't commit you won't have a new version of the changes made?
Yes, committing and pushing are both manual.
-
If are not collaborating and you are already using a backup system why would you use Git?
If you encounter an error between commits you can use the command
git diff
to see the differences between the current code and the last working commit, helping you to locate your error.You can also just go back to the last working commit.
If you want to try a change, but are not sure that it will work. You create a branch to test you code change. If it works fine, you merge it to the main branch. If it does not you just throw the branch away and go back to the main branch.
You did some debugging. Before you commit you always look at the changes from the last commit. You see your debug print statement that you forgot to delete.
Make sure you check gitimmersion.com.
Solution 2:
-
What is the difference between Git and GitHub?
Linus Torvalds would kill you for this. Git is the name of the version manager program he wrote. GitHub is a website on which there are source code repositories manageable by Git. Thus, GitHub is completely unrelated to the original Git tool.
-
Is git saving every repository locally (in the user's machine) and in GitHub?
If you commit changes, it stores locally. Then, if you push the commits, it also sotres them remotely.
-
Can you use Git without GitHub? If yes, what would be the benefit for using GitHub?
You can, but I'm sure you don't want to manually set up a git server for yourself. Benefits of GitHub? Well, easy to use, lot of people know it so others may find your code and follow/fork it to make improvements as well.
-
How does Git compare to a backup system such as Time Machine?
Git is specifically designed and optimized for source code.
-
Is this a manual process, in other words if you don't commit you wont have a new version of the changes made?
Exactly.
-
If are not collaborating and you are already using a backup system why would you use Git?
See #4.