Reading Note on notation
Last updated: January 4, 2023
Placeholders
Throughout this course, I am using the < and > signs to indicate that an expression needs to be replaced by the information appropriate to your situation (without those signs).
Code blocks
White background
Any code with such placeholder that you need to edit has a white background.
Example:
git remote add <remote-name> <remote-address>
Gray background
Code that can be run without any modification has a gray background.
Example:
git remote -v
Inline code
I follow the same rule in inline code. In addition, names of Git pointers and paths have a white background to distinguish them more easily from actual code.
Example:
This is how I write the master branch and HEAD (2 pointers) and this is how I write /some/path . In contrast, actual code such as git status is formatted in gray.