I think this is bad advice for git newbies two reasons:
1. ‘git add .’ is dangerous and should be avoided IMO, in case you ever have files around that you don’t want to commit. I frequently do. It’s better to ‘git commit -a’, and to just remember to run ‘git status’ frequently and ‘git add’ any new files.
2. ‘git reset —-hard’ is dangerous as well for newbies, since it’s destructive. Better to ‘git revert’ or to ‘git checkout <sha>; git checkout -b <newbranch>’, such that you can always get back to where you were.
1. ‘git add .’ is dangerous and should be avoided IMO, in case you ever have files around that you don’t want to commit. I frequently do. It’s better to ‘git commit -a’, and to just remember to run ‘git status’ frequently and ‘git add’ any new files.
2. ‘git reset —-hard’ is dangerous as well for newbies, since it’s destructive. Better to ‘git revert’ or to ‘git checkout <sha>; git checkout -b <newbranch>’, such that you can always get back to where you were.