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I'm not really experienced with Git and I had a problem exactly as in this question. Note that all of the four answers mention git reset --hard which causes loss of uncommitted/unstashed changes in the working copy and only one of the answers actually mentions the risk of data loss and only does so somewhere closer to the bottom.

Since I'm not really experienced with Git I'd say that it's not immediately obvious that the command sequences mentioned in the answers can actually cause data loss. Maybe it's obvious for experienced users - I don't know. I feel like every answer advising on such command sequences deserves a clear warning in the beginning (unless the question was something like "how do I have all the data on my disk deleted?" - then of course it's obvious that any command sequence provided as an answer can cause a data loss).

So I'm pretty sure those answers Need Improvementâ„¢. What should I do? Should I edit them and include a warning? Should I do anything else?

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    I would leave a comment, suggesting that the author of the answer add a warning. Jul 18, 2014 at 7:01
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    A lot of people will leave a comment in big bold text like this that says WARNING: THIS WILL REMOVE CHANGES FROM YOUR WORKING COPY.
    – user456814
    Jul 18, 2014 at 7:24

1 Answer 1

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I spend most of my time in the Git tag. On a lot of answers I see that involve git reset, I will often see people leaving bold comments like

WARNING: HARD RESETS UNDO MODIFIED FILES IN THE WORKING COPY

if it's not already mentioned in the answer.

Update

I've just edited all the answers that mention using a hard reset with a warning about losing any uncommitted modifications.

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