**Git Branching and Merging Exercise** This exercise will help you practice working with Git branches, merging, and handling conflicts. The repository contains three branches (main, feature-1, and feature-2), each with a main.cpp file showing which branch it’s from. Follow these steps to complete the exercise. Steps Step 1: Fork and Clone the Repository Fork the Repository: Go to the repository's web page and fork it to your account. Clone the Repository: Copy the URL of your fork, then clone it to your local machine. Navigate into the Repository: Move into the directory of the cloned repository. Step 2: Check Your Current Branch Use Git to list the available branches and see which branch you’re currently on. Step 3: Switch to feature-1 Branch Switch to feature-1,feature-2 and explore the contents. You should find main.cpp with a message specific to this branch. Step 4: Merge feature-1 into main Switch back to main: Change to the main branch. Merge feature-1: Merge the feature-1 branch into main. Push the Changes: If the merge completes without conflict, push your updates to your remote repository. Step 5: Merge feature-2 into main (Expect Conflict) Switch to main: Make sure you’re on the main branch. Attempt to Merge feature-2: When you try to merge feature-2, a conflict will occur in main.cpp because both branches modified the same lines. Step 6: Resolve the Conflict Open main.cpp: In your text editor, you’ll see conflict markers indicating the conflicting sections. Manually Resolve the Conflict: Choose how to combine or select the changes. Remove the conflict markers and save the resolved file. Mark the Conflict as Resolved: Add the resolved file and commit the changes to complete the merge. Step 7: Push the Final Merged Branch Push the completed merge to the remote repository so that main reflects both feature branches. Step 8: Verify Your Work Check the history to confirm that both feature-1 and feature-2 were successfully merged without any unresolved conflicts.