So I just did a git --reset soft to go back to a previous commit. Now what if I want to go back to the latest commit that I was at before? i.e: the latest commit? I tried doing
Do you want to basically undo your reset? It's not going to show up in your git log because you reverted it from that. However it will show up in your
git reflog
This will give you a listing of all your different branches.
git reset HEAD@{1}
Should fix your problem if your reset was the last thing you did.
git reset
is the wrong tool to use if you just want to go back and look at an old commit, since in many modes it actually alters the history by removing commits, as you've discovered.
If you want to temporarily get an old commit back in your working tree, just use git checkout
. In this case, git checkout HEAD^
will take you back one commit. git checkout HEAD~3
will take you back three commits, and so on. Or you can give it the hash from git log
.
You can then return to the latest commit by doing git checkout master
(replacing master
with the name of any branch).