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[[!comment format=mdwn
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username="https://id.koumbit.net/anarcat"
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subject="comment 1"
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date="2015-02-15T05:46:01Z"
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content="""
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> This way, if a file has a staged change, it gets committed, and then that commit is reverted, resulting in another commit. Which a later run of undo can in turn revert. If it didn't commit, the history about the staged change that was reverted would be lost.
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so far, my experience with this is that unstaged changes get dropped and the change that gets undoed is the last committed change. In other words, if i have:
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$ git annex status
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M file
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`git annex undo` is going to drop that modification and `git revert HEAD`. but maybe i got confused, in which care some of the documentation i just did in [[direct mode]] needs to be corrected. --[[anarcat]]
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"""]]
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