1. git config

Sets configuration values for your user name, email, gpg key, preferred diff algorithm, file formats and more. Example: git config --global user.name "My Name", git config --global user.email "user@domain.com"

2. git init

Initializes a git repository – creates the initial ‘.git’ directory in a new or in an existing project. Example: cd /home/user/my_new_git_folder/ and git init

3. git clone

Makes a Git repository copy from a remote source. Also adds the original location as a remote so you can fetch from it again and push to it if you have permissions. Example: git clone git@github.com:user/test.git

4. git add

Adds files changes in your working directory to your index. Example: git add .

5. git rm

Removes files from your index and your working directory so they will not be tracked. Example: git rm filename

6. git commit

Takes all of the changes written in the index, creates a new commit object pointing to it and sets the branch to point to that new commit. Examples: git commit -m "committing added changes"

7. git status

Shows you the status of files in the index versus the working directory. It will list out files that are untracked (only in your working directory), modified (tracked but not yet updated in your index), and staged (added to your index and ready for committing). Example: git status

8. git branch

Lists existing branches, including remote branches if ‘-a’ is provided. Creates a new branch if a branch name is provided. Example: git branch -a * master remotes/origin/master`

9. git checkout

Checks out a different branch – switches branches by updating the index, working tree, and HEAD to reflect the chosen branch. Example: git checkout newbranch

10. git merge

Merges one or more branches into your current branch and automatically creates a new commit if there are no conflicts. Example: git merge newbranchversion

11. git reset

Resets your index and working directory to the state of your last commit. Example: git reset --hard HEAD

12. git stash

Temporarily saves changes that you don’t want to commit immediately. You can apply the changes later. Example: git stash and then git stash apply when you want to re-apply your changes.

13. git tag

Tags a specific commit with a simple, human readable handle that never moves. Example: git tag -a v1.0 -m 'this is version 1.0 tag'

14. git fetch

Fetches all the objects from the remote repository that are not present in the local one. Example: git fetch origin

15. git pull

Fetches the files from the remote repository and merges it with your local one. This command is equal to the git fetch and the git merge sequence. Example: git pull origin

16. git push

Pushes all the modified local objects to the remote repository and advances its branches. Example: git push origin master

17. git remote

Shows all the remote versions of your repository. Example: git remote origin

18. git log

Shows a listing of commits on a branch including the corresponding details. Example: git log

19. git show

Shows information about a git object. Example: git show commit 84f241e8a0d768fb37ff7ad40e294b61a99a0abe

20. git ls-tree

Shows a tree object, including the mode and the name of each item and the SHA-1 value of the blob or the tree that it points to. Example: git ls-tree master

21. git cat-file

Used to view the type of an object through the SHA-1 value. Example: git cat-file -t e69de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391 blob

22. git grep

Lets you search through your trees of content for words and phrases. Example: git grep "www.siteground.com" — *.php

23. git diff

Generates patch files or statistics of differences between paths or files in your git repository, or your index or your working directory. Example: git diff