this post was submitted on 03 Jun 2026
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I created a repository from my terminal as a testing. Now I wish to see how git works. What you say, l need to understand in terms of precise git commands, because all this can be done from the terminal. I prefer working on image files. Or you think text files would be better ? I've no idea of programming languages, but maybe html ?? And what do you mean by software ???
One of the big advantages of git is you can see the difference between versions of text. Since you don't programming languages imagine a group report project in school. Sally may make up the general structure and main points. Tom writes a expanded section of 2 of the points. Matt writes another 2. Sue writes the introduction and conclusion. Jason edits it. Git lets you walk back through all that and shows you who did what and lets you keep/discard the changes. It can show you who changed what and when.
With pictures and images it can store the different versions but can't distinguish what exactly changed. Like it can store a picture with a blue background and then someone changes it to an orange background but it can't know exactly what changed only that it's different,if they changed the background of a city skyline they could of also inserted a tiny monkey into one of the windows. You would have to scan everything versed it highlighting only the differences.
Btw .. here is a book with A LOT more details https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2
I see. So, yes, we'd better work with text files.
Maybe we could start off with HTML ?
If you want html is fine. You could also just write anything like a story, a shopping list, a schedule of chores anything really.
What's your goal with learning git? Is it to learn programming?
Now you're suggesting me very creative methods regarding how l can use git in my daily life. Maybe l could even create an ui for this purpose :)))
But yes, I do wish to get into programming, as that's what's going to become a major source of employment, whether we work in some kind of organisation or work in some sort of decentralised setup.
Basically anything you want to track the changes to can be used with git.
If you want to get into programming something I would recommend is deciding if you want front end or back end development. What that means is like do you want to do ui/ux or computation work? The basics are similar but quickly diverge. Html is front end, it's making things look good and easy for the user. Something like rust or c# is more backend. Do you want to design what the user sees or how to solve problems?
I need to learn and experiment a lot. The picture emerges as l progress. Designing what the user sees is also a problem.
Sounds like you like front end better. Html and css are basics of web design and good starting points, some JavaScript might also be beneficial. Here's a fun thing you can do, go to most websites, press f12 and it will open "developer tools". You can then mess around with the website like changing fonts or editing text or inserting pictures. It will only be on your computer and only exist till you close the tab/window but fun to play with
Btw totally don't do this on your friends twitter page and edit the text of their tweet to make them look bad, screenshot it and then use it as blackmail. Totally do not recommend and I never made it look like my friends posting pictures of shirtless men riding unicorns over a rainbow ... Nope that never happened and you should not do that .... 😀
I really need to learn the use of those f keys 😄😄😄😄😄
You really don't. F1 help f11 full screen f12 developer tools,that's all you need to know
Oh forgot f5 for refresh
I've used f4 for shutting down the system.
Only with alt but yes
I mean you probably want to use Git to solve some kind of problem in your life. The usual use-case is to manage software projects. It's also good at managing text files of any kind. Whatever you like. A HTML file is text, too. It's a bit less good with images and other binary formats. But you can use it to manage them as well.
I don't know what are binary formats specifically, but I too would be using it for software related projects. It's just that l need to get the hang of these tools.
Right now, Gemini is proving to be a great teacher, telling me the steps and also rectifying my errors.
By binary formats, they mean files that are intended to be interpreted or executed by a computer.
For example, a program (my-app.exe) is a binary file. You use it by double clicking it, and the computer runs the program. If you tried to read the file by opening it in a text editor, you would only see gibberish and random characters.
Another example, an image (my-photo.jpg) is a binary file. It's not a program, but you can view the image with a program like Paint. But just like a program, if you opened an image in a text editor, you would still see gibberish. That's because the gibberish is interpreted by Paint so that you can view the image.
But source code (my-website.html) is not a binary file, it's just a text file with fancy formatting and special rules on how to write it. You can open an HTML file in your text editor, and as long as you know the rules you can learn to read it.
So, there are certain types of files that can be opened with a text editor, and some kinds of files need special programs to open.
Is the program paint open source ?