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- Title Learn Version Control with Git: A Step-by-Step Course for the Complete Beginner
- Authors Tobias Günther
- Publisher: Amazon Digital Services, Inc. (2014); Git-Tower.com (HTML, Update Continuously)
- Paperback: 136 pages
- eBook: HTML, PDF, ePub, and Mobi
- Language: English
- ISBN-10/ASIN: B00K54OL8I
- ISBN-13: N/A
- Share This:
You won't find a top programmer, web developer, or web designer who doesn't use version control. Because it helps you produce better results and makes collaboration easy.
Git is one of those version control systems - but not just any: Top projects like the Linux Kernel, Ruby On Rails, or jQuery use Git as their version control system of choice. Around the world, in teams large and small, Git is an essential part of the tool chain.
This book is a beginner-friendly step-by-step course. The book doesn't require a deep technical background. Instead, it's aimed at beginners of version control and/or programming, designers, and project managers.
About the Authors- N/A
- Version Control, Source Control, and Revision Control
- Software Engineering
- IT Project Management
- Books by O'Reilly®
- Learn Version Control with Git: A step-by-step course for the complete beginner (Tobias Günther)
- The Mirror Site (1) - PDF
-
GitHub Succinctly (Joseph D. Booth)
This hands-on book is an interactive, fun and practical guide to install, configure and use Git and GitHub. It shows you how to use GitHub's web interface to view projects and collaborate effectively with your team.
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Pro Git, 2nd Edition (Scott Chacon)
Pro Git (Second Edition) is your fully-updated guide to Git and its usage in the modern world. It takes you step-by-step through ways to track, merge, and manage software projects, using this highly flexible, open source version control system: Git.
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Pro Git Reedited (Jon Forrest)
The author thinks that this book can replace Pro Git for online English readers. It's simply a collection of English-specific changes to Pro Git that can be ignored in other languages. It makes concept of Git much easier to understand.
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Version Control by Example (Eric Sink)
This book uses practical examples to explain version control with both centralized and decentralized systems. It starts with an overview of version control systems, and shows how being distributed enables you to work more efficiently.
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Introduction to Git and Github (Launch School)
This book is for the absolute beginner and provides a gentle introduction to git and Github. Get a jump start using git on your projects, and learn how to push those projects to Github.com.
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Conversational Git (Alan Hohn)
This is a short book that covers the basics of Git version control. The lessons are short and provide step-by-step instructions to guide a beginner to the basic usage of Git commands. This is a practical hands-on guide to learning Git.
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Ry's Git Tutorial (Ryan Hodson)
This comprehensive guide will walk you through the entire Git library, writing code and executing commands every step of the way. You'll create commits, revert snapshots, navigate branches, communicate with remote repositories, and experience core Git concepts first-hand.
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Git Succinctly (Ryan Hodson)
This book is your quick guide to how Git operates, what its advantages are, and how you can incorporate it into your own workflow. You can get up and running with one of the fastest-spreading revision control systems out there.
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Essential Git (Krzysztof Kowalczyk)
This book provides clear and concise explanation of topics for programmers both starting to learn the Git programming as well as those diving in more complex topics. Examples are linked to online playground that allows you to play with them.
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O'Reilly® Version Control with Subversion
This is the official guide and reference manual for the popular open source revision control technology: Subversion.
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Learn Enough Git to Be Dangerous (Michael Hartl)
This book doesn't even assume you're familiar with the category of application, so if you're unsure about what 'version control' is, you're in the right place. Even if you are already familiar with the subject, it's likely you'll still learn a lot from this tutorial.
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O'Reilly® Mercurial: The Definitive Guide (Bryan O'Sullivan)
This instructive book takes you step by step through ways to track, merge, and manage both open source and commercial software projects with Mercurial, using Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, Solaris, and other systems.
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Subversion Version Control in Development Projects (William Nagel)
In this practical, hands-on guide, you will learn how to use Subversion and how to effectively merge a version control system within your development process. It also includes development approaches that you can customize to fit your own environment.
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Git Notes for Professionals (Stack Overflow)
This is a deep and immersive guide to Git, with plenty to teach those who've been using it for a while, yet goes out of its way to be welcoming to new Git users coming from other version control systems.
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