Since the operation in progress is merge, stick to the 'git merge'
variant of aborting. 'git reset --hard' does not really tell you about
aborting the merge by just looking, longer to type, and even though I
know by heart what --hard do, I still dislike it when I need to consider
whether --hard, --mixed or --soft.

Signed-off-by: Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclo...@gmail.com>
---
 Documentation/user-manual.txt | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/Documentation/user-manual.txt b/Documentation/user-manual.txt
index 94799faa2b..4e210970e1 100644
--- a/Documentation/user-manual.txt
+++ b/Documentation/user-manual.txt
@@ -1408,7 +1408,7 @@ If you get stuck and decide to just give up and throw the 
whole mess
 away, you can always return to the pre-merge state with
 
 -------------------------------------------------
-$ git reset --hard HEAD
+$ git merge --abort
 -------------------------------------------------
 
 Or, if you've already committed the merge that you want to throw away,
-- 
2.21.0.854.ge34a79f761

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