+ [2016-09-06T23:24:12Z] Nixola so it was just one repo working here
+ [2016-09-06T23:35:58Z] Nixola how do I undo my last commit (which I did not push yet)?
+ [2016-09-06T23:36:56Z] allejo git reset HEAD~
+ [2016-09-06T23:37:28Z] Nixola thanks
+ [2016-09-06T23:50:14Z] PBJmonster Will commits show up on my tracker on my profile if I don't use a valid email?

message no. 149745

Posted by Nixola in #github at 2016-09-06T22:58:50Z

I couldn't add it to the account because it was already existing, so I thought the one I had in the account was the one I have here
+ [2016-09-07T03:47:36Z] drewery anybody knows how I can change the base branch of my branch from master to another branch?
+ [2016-09-07T03:47:42Z] drewery rebase doesn't seem to work in this case
+ [2016-09-07T06:06:46Z] Spring Impaloo, merely providing the ability to rename such files would be enough to be able to move them. Github already promotes the idea of using the web interface as a workflow, they even have a dedicated microsite about it.
+ [2016-09-07T06:47:57Z] peepsalot is there a way to view a diff between any two commits on the github site?
+ [2016-09-07T07:46:35Z] simenbrekken Hi, my workflow is probably similar to a lot of others. I create pull requests from feature branches that I later squash and merge on Github. I'm wondering if there's an easy way to clean up local branches that have merged using squash and merge. git branch --merged obviously doesn't list the branches since the merge was performed using --squash