Your .gitignore
almost works but it doesn't for a simple reason: the first rule (*
) tells Git to ignore every file and directory in the root of the repository. Git honors it and ignores everything, including the That
directory and its content. The "unignore" rules that follow do not match anything inside the That
subdirectory because the That
directory is ignored together with it content, and they don't have effect.
In order to tell Git to not ignore files and directories in a deeply nested sub-directory you have to write ignore and unignore rules to let it reach the enclosing sub-directory first and then add the rules you want.
Your .gitignore
file should look like this:
### Ignore everything ###
*
# But do not ignore "That" because we need something from its internals...
!That/
# ... but ignore (almost all) the content of "That"...
That/*
# ... however, do not ignore "That/Very" because we need to dig more into it
!That/Very/
# ... but we don't care about most of the content of "That/Very"
That/Very/*
# ... except for "That/Very/Folder" we care
!That/Very/Folder/
# ... and its content
!That/Very/Folder/*
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