Nicholas Canzoneri on 15 Oct 2010 07:04:51 -0700 |
I really liked Git from the Bottom Up: http://ftp.newartisans.com/pub/git.from.bottom.up.pdf Goes more into the details of Git internally and lets you grok why git does things certain ways. --Nick Canzoneri On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 09:44, JP Toto <james.p.toto@gmail.com> wrote: > http://progit.org > > Free to read online. Excellent in print. Very concise and gets you > running quickly. > > Also try http://www.gitready.com for some cookbook style tuts. > > On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 9:39 AM, Tom Panzarella <tpanzarella@gmail.com> wrote: >> Hi All- >> >> Does anyone have a recommendation for a Git book (or other reference) that I can use to get a team member up-to-speed on Git very quickly. He is a very experienced engineer coming in with a CVS background as far as version control goes. So, ideally, a git book that is no fluff but also touches on DVCS concepts in general as well as git specifics. >> >> Thanks in advance, >> Tom. >> >> >> >> > > > > -- > JP Toto | james.p.toto@gmail.com > > ] Business: http://www.cognisit.com > ] Personal: http://www.viceclown.com ; | http://twitter.com/jptoto > ] Projects: http://www.barcampphilly.org ; | http://www.mvcmelee.com > > "To understand recursion, you must first understand recursion." > -- Nick Canzoneri ac3522@gmail.com @ac3522
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