Local Version Control

Reading history and restoring work

Inspect past changes and undo safely.

8 minutes - Absolute beginner

What this means

git log shows commits, git diff compares states, and restore or revert operations undo different kinds of changes.

In beginner terms, this topic answers one practical question: "What should I write, and why does React care about it?" Do not try to memorize the syntax first. First understand the idea, then connect the syntax to that idea.

Why it matters

Safe recovery depends on knowing whether work is uncommitted, committed locally, or already shared.

When you build real React screens, this idea helps you decide where data should live, what the user should see, and what should happen after an interaction. That is why this lesson is part of the main path instead of being an optional detail.

Step by step

1. Notice the UI problem this topic solves. 2. Look at the smallest possible example. 3. Change one value and predict what should appear. 4. Run the example and compare the result with your prediction. 5. Use the practice task before moving on.

Small example

git log --oneline
git diff
git revert <commit>

Common mistake

Do not copy reading history and restoring work syntax without explaining what problem it solves and checking the result.

Practice task

Change one part of the example, predict the result, run it, and explain the result in your own words.

Remember this

Do not rewrite shared history unless the team explicitly agrees.

try.it

Examples

Try it: Reading history and restoring work

Edit this focused Git example and run it in the browser preview.

Preview runs browser-safe JavaScript in a sandboxed frame, never on the server.

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editor

preview

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practice.next

Practice before moving on

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