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@alexislucena
Created November 14, 2016 08:56
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Git: How to uncommit my last commit in git

To keep the changes from the commit you want to undo

$ git reset --soft HEAD^

To destroy the changes from the commit you want to undo

$ git reset --hard HEAD^

You can also say

$ git reset --soft HEAD~2

to go back 2 commits.

If you are on Windows you will need to put HEAD or commit hash in quotes.

$ git reset --soft "HEAD^"
$ git reset --soft "asdf"

Source:
http://stackoverflow.com/a/13480388/2050561

@Cvetomird91
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Thank you for sharing those steps!

@ShrikantaMazumder
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thank you

@LizSafina
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Thank you!

@satbeeer
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satbeeer commented Feb 2, 2021

Thanks alexislucena, its really helpful.

@shahab-ab
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when i run the above command I get the following errro
fatal: ambiguous argument '–-soft': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
'git [...] -- [...]'

@alexislucena
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alexislucena commented Sep 7, 2021

when i run the above command I get the following errro
fatal: ambiguous argument '–-soft': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
'git [...] -- [...]'

@shahab-ab from your error message, it seems you are using a dash character that is not the standard, – instead of -

@shahab-ab
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@alexislucena thank you.. it worked.

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