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        WDX-180
Web Development X
The tag command creates, lists, deletes, or verifies a commit marker with a GnuPG tag object attached. This helps add some semantic meaning to a commit message.
Syntax
git tag <flags> <tag-name> <commit-reference> <tag-object>
The <flags> include the following:
| Flag | Description | 
|---|---|
| -a/--annotate | The tag is annotated but unsigned. | 
| -s/--sign | The tag is annotated and signed with the key of the default email address. | 
| -f/--force | An existing tag is forcibly replaced with a given <tag-name>. | 
| -d/--delete | One or more existing tags are deleted by <tag-name>. | 
| -v/--verify | One or more existing tags are verified by <tag-name>. | 
| -l/--list | All existing tags are listed (same as running just git tag). | 
| -m/--message | A message for an existing tag is defined instead of prompted. Multiple -mmessages can be used, but they will combined as separate paragraphs. | 
| -F/--file | A tag message from an existing file is read from the standard input. | 
| -e/--edit | A tag message made from -mor-Fis edited. | 
The <tag-name> refers to the tag object for a commit.
The <commit-reference> is the commit the tag will be attached to.
The <tag-object> is usually the commit that the new tag refers to (defaults to the HEAD) pointer.
Example
The following is a small example of the tag command being used to create and annotate an object for the HEAD commit pointer:
git tag -a tag-for-head-pointer
        
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