Git problem - checking my users/personal folder
I've got a little problem with git.
Today I started larning git, but something go wrong and now in visual studio see statement:
"The git repository at 'c: Users Personal' has too many active changes, only a subset of Git features will be enabled."
In github desktop I can see few hundred changes mostly in /appdata. I don't know how to stop this.
I tried to remove repository which was opened in this folder but nothing is working.
git github
add a comment |
I've got a little problem with git.
Today I started larning git, but something go wrong and now in visual studio see statement:
"The git repository at 'c: Users Personal' has too many active changes, only a subset of Git features will be enabled."
In github desktop I can see few hundred changes mostly in /appdata. I don't know how to stop this.
I tried to remove repository which was opened in this folder but nothing is working.
git github
sounds to me like you created a repository at c:userspersonal and haven't actually deleted it.
– Dan Farrell
Jan 19 at 16:15
add a comment |
I've got a little problem with git.
Today I started larning git, but something go wrong and now in visual studio see statement:
"The git repository at 'c: Users Personal' has too many active changes, only a subset of Git features will be enabled."
In github desktop I can see few hundred changes mostly in /appdata. I don't know how to stop this.
I tried to remove repository which was opened in this folder but nothing is working.
git github
I've got a little problem with git.
Today I started larning git, but something go wrong and now in visual studio see statement:
"The git repository at 'c: Users Personal' has too many active changes, only a subset of Git features will be enabled."
In github desktop I can see few hundred changes mostly in /appdata. I don't know how to stop this.
I tried to remove repository which was opened in this folder but nothing is working.
git github
git github
asked Jan 19 at 16:13
marqunmarqun
1
1
sounds to me like you created a repository at c:userspersonal and haven't actually deleted it.
– Dan Farrell
Jan 19 at 16:15
add a comment |
sounds to me like you created a repository at c:userspersonal and haven't actually deleted it.
– Dan Farrell
Jan 19 at 16:15
sounds to me like you created a repository at c:userspersonal and haven't actually deleted it.
– Dan Farrell
Jan 19 at 16:15
sounds to me like you created a repository at c:userspersonal and haven't actually deleted it.
– Dan Farrell
Jan 19 at 16:15
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
I think you ran git init
in your home directory. So now there's a folder at C:UsersPersonal.git
. If you didn't intend this then you can just delete that directory.
It's normal to create a folder for each project. If you're using visual studio the normal thing is to have a C:UsersYouSourceRepos
folder where all your projects will live. So if you have a project in C:UsersYouSourceReposYourProject
you can cd
into that directory an run git init
to create a git repository for that project.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I think you ran git init
in your home directory. So now there's a folder at C:UsersPersonal.git
. If you didn't intend this then you can just delete that directory.
It's normal to create a folder for each project. If you're using visual studio the normal thing is to have a C:UsersYouSourceRepos
folder where all your projects will live. So if you have a project in C:UsersYouSourceReposYourProject
you can cd
into that directory an run git init
to create a git repository for that project.
add a comment |
I think you ran git init
in your home directory. So now there's a folder at C:UsersPersonal.git
. If you didn't intend this then you can just delete that directory.
It's normal to create a folder for each project. If you're using visual studio the normal thing is to have a C:UsersYouSourceRepos
folder where all your projects will live. So if you have a project in C:UsersYouSourceReposYourProject
you can cd
into that directory an run git init
to create a git repository for that project.
add a comment |
I think you ran git init
in your home directory. So now there's a folder at C:UsersPersonal.git
. If you didn't intend this then you can just delete that directory.
It's normal to create a folder for each project. If you're using visual studio the normal thing is to have a C:UsersYouSourceRepos
folder where all your projects will live. So if you have a project in C:UsersYouSourceReposYourProject
you can cd
into that directory an run git init
to create a git repository for that project.
I think you ran git init
in your home directory. So now there's a folder at C:UsersPersonal.git
. If you didn't intend this then you can just delete that directory.
It's normal to create a folder for each project. If you're using visual studio the normal thing is to have a C:UsersYouSourceRepos
folder where all your projects will live. So if you have a project in C:UsersYouSourceReposYourProject
you can cd
into that directory an run git init
to create a git repository for that project.
answered Jan 19 at 16:21
AdamAdam
1,235920
1,235920
add a comment |
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sounds to me like you created a repository at c:userspersonal and haven't actually deleted it.
– Dan Farrell
Jan 19 at 16:15