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Start your free trialLahari Sirigineedi
6,961 PointsRun the "git diff" command again, but this time add the option that will show you the staged changes. (When you have the
Run the "git diff" command again, but this time add the option that will show you the staged changes. (When you have the command right, changes to both the file that was previously tracked and the file that was previously untracked will be shown.)
2 Answers
Unsubscribed User
Front End Web Development Techdegree Student 33,900 PointsFrom the course material of the lesson "Viewing Changes to a File":
"...there's a command line option that will show you staged changes if you specify it: git diff --staged. With the --staged option, git diff will compare your staged changes against the previous commit."
That should help! :-)
Happy coding!
Nils
PS: You can upvote my post and / or mark it as "best answer" if it helped you. :-)
David Patrick
6,067 PointsAnswer: git diff --staged
Lynn Collins
10,080 PointsLynn Collins
10,080 PointsHi Nils, Just re-completed the challenge and discovered that it was a mere spacing issue