![]() After doing so, your commit graph looks something like the following: (Let’s blame it on your freakishly productive co-worker, Bob.) To better visualize the state we’re in, let’s pull those changes down to your local repository. This means someone else has pushed new changes to the central repository before you did. You finish the changes you’ve been working on, and commit them to your local repository (the third and fourth commits in the following screenshot).īut when you go to push your new commits to your team’s central repository, Tortoise stops you with message saying you shouldn’t create “multiple heads” in the remote repository. You’re working in your local repository, and there have already been a few commits that you’ve pulled in from the central repository (two, in the screenshot below). How We End Up in This Situation (or, “It’s All Bob’s Fault”) ![]()
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