Is there a Git command to revert all uncommitted changes in a working tree and index and to also remove newly created files and folders?
How can I revert uncommitted changes including files and folders?
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git clean -fd
didn't help, and new files remained. I totally deleted all the working tree and then
git reset --hard
See "https://stackoverflow.com/questions/673407/how-do-i-clear-my-local-working-directory-in-git/673420#673420" for advice to add the -x
option to clean:
git clean -fdx
Note -x
flag will remove all files ignored by Git, so be careful (see the discussion in the answer I refer to).

One non-trivial way is to run these two commands:
git stash
This will move your changes to the stash, bringing you back to the state of HEADgit stash drop
This will delete the latest stash created in the last command.

Git 2.23 introduced the git restore
command to restore working tree files.
To restore all files in the current directory:
git restore .
If you want to restore all C source files to match the version in the index, you can do
git restore '*.c'

You can just use following Git command which can revert back all the uncommitted changes made in your repository:
git checkout .
Example:
ABC@ABC-PC MINGW64 /c/xampp/htdocs/pod_admin (master)
$ git status
On branch master
Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/master'.
Changes not staged for commit:
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
(use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
modified: application/controllers/Drivers.php
modified: application/views/drivers/add.php
modified: application/views/drivers/load_driver_info.php
modified: uploads/drivers/drivers.xlsx
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
ABC@ABC-PC MINGW64 /c/xampp/htdocs/pod_admin (master)
$ git checkout .
ABC@ABC-PC MINGW64 /c/xampp/htdocs/pod_admin (master)
$ git status
On branch master
Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/master'.
nothing to commit, working tree clean

If you want to revert the changes only in the current working directory, use
git checkout -- .
And before that, you can list the files that will be reverted without actually making any action, just to check what will happen, with:
git checkout --

If you have an uncommitted change (it’s only in your working copy) that you wish to revert to the copy in your latest commit, do the following:
git checkout filename

Please note that there might still be files that won't seem to disappear - they might be unedited, but Git might have marked them as being edited because of CRLF / LF changes. See if you've made some changes in .gitattributes
recently.
In my case, I've added CRLF settings into the .gitattributes
file and all the files remained in the "modified files" list because of this. Changing the .gitattributes settings made them disappear.

A safe and long way:
git branch todelete
git checkout todelete
git add .
git commit -m "I did a bad thing, sorry"
git checkout develop
git branch -D todelete
You can run these two commands: