this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2024
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Git repos have lots of write protected files in the .git directory, sometimes hundreds, and the default rm my_project_managed_by_git will prompt before deleting each write protected file. So, to actually delete my project I have to do rm -rf my_project_managed_by_git.

Using rm -rf scares me. Is there a reasonable way to delete git repos without it?

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[–] somethingsomethingidk@lemmy.world 6 points 5 months ago (1 children)

If you're making backups of things you care about and not running sudo rm -rf the command isn't really dangerous.

But +1 for having it in /tmp I have a bash function I call tempd that is basically cd $(mktemp -d) I use it so much for stuff I dont really care to keep.

[–] redbr64@lemmy.world 2 points 5 months ago

Never heard of mktemp before, that's need. Come to think of it I never thought about how /tmp is really used by the system in the first place, time to do do studying I guess