If you are short in time, please skip the following completely-untechnical-irrelevant-3-paragraphs.
I have been fighting with streams of texts on the web for hours, just for understand how to revert a commit, which is laterly found to be unnecessary, unwanted or wrong. There are plenty of intorductory & advanced tutorials/manuals for git, most of which fails to serve a practical guideline when things get complicated on your side. Even the beautiful answers on stackoverflow may become drifting and misleading sometimes, because in the end we are the noobs who try to implement those answers, mostly failing dozens of times and get frustrated from life =/
When these problems are about our lovely, precious projects, it becomes more and more frightening and stressful and git is hell-of-a complicated creature who is not willing to co-operate most of the times, which make things more difficult(!)
So sorry for the long intro and I know it may not be the case for the majority, but for me and alikes, manuals and helps and guides are sometimes helpless and you are on your own with your luck, insight and endurance. That's why, I am not going to ask a question today, but rather answer a possible one after it became my lovely solution to my problem, hoping that it will help you out of your misery =)
Problem: If you have commited a change in your project but want to revert it, even if there are plenty of ways doing that, this one has shined for me: git rebase. It does not matter whether you pushed your change or not, we can revert that commit anyways, but if you have pushed it already, we will need to re-push again to update the master branch on github and I will come back to this later.