I was working on a git branch and was ready to commit my changes, so I made a commit with a useful commit message. I then absentmindedly made minor changes to the code that are not worth keeping. I now want to change branches, but git gives me,
error: You have local changes to "X"; cannot switch branches.
Can I change branches without committing? If so, how can I set this up? If not, how do I get out of this problem? I want to ignore the minor changes without committing and just change branches.
error: You have local changes to '<filename>'; cannot switch branches.
and branch will not change. you can do git checkout -m <branch-name>
to merge conflicts and checkout to the branch and resolve conflicts yourself, or git checkout -f <branch-name>
to ignore changes.
You need a clean state to change branches. The branch checkout will only be allowed if it does not affect the 'dirty files' (as Charles Bailey remarks in the comments).
Otherwise, you should either:
stash your current change or
reset --hard HEAD (if you do not mind losing those minor changes) or
checkout -f (When switching branches, proceed even if the index or the working tree differs from HEAD. This is used to throw away local changes. )
Or, more recently:
With Git 2.23 (August 2019) and the new command git switch: git switch -f
Proceed even if the index or the working tree differs from HEAD. Both the index and working tree are restored to match the switching target.
This differs from git switch -m <branch-name>
, which triggers a three-way merge between the current branch, your working tree contents, and the new branch is done: you won't loose your work in progress that way.
If you want to discard the changes,
git checkout -- <file>
git checkout branch
If you want to keep the changes,
git stash save
git checkout branch
git stash pop
git stash save
(when in working branchY) then git checkout branchX
do something git add/commit -m
etc. git checkout branchY
and git stash pop
to get back the stash
git stash save
is now deprecated in favor of git stash push
well, it should be
git stash save
git checkout branch
// do something
git checkout oldbranch
git stash pop
git stash
will default to git stash save
Follow,
$: git checkout -f
$: git checkout next_branch
Note that if you've merged remote branches or have local commits and want to go back to the remote HEAD you must do:
git reset --hard origin/HEAD
HEAD
alone will only refer to the local commit/merge -- several times I have forgotten that when resetting and end up with "your repository is X commits ahead.." when I fully intended to nuke ALL changes/commits and return to the remote branch.
None of these answers helped me because I still had untracked files even after reset and stash. I had to do:
git reset --hard HEAD
git clean -d -f
git checkout -f your_branch_name
git checkout -f your_branch_name
if you have troubles reverting changes:
git checkout .
if you want to remove untracked directories and files:
git clean -fd
If you have made changes to files that Git also needs to change when switching branches, it won't let you. To discard working changes, use:
git reset --hard HEAD
Then, you will be able to switch branches.
Follow these steps:
Git stash save will save all your changes even if you switch between branches.
git stash save
Git checkout any other branch, now since you saved your changes you can move around any branch. The above command will make sure that your changes are saved.
git checkout branch
Now when you come back to the branch use this command to get all your changes back.
git stash pop
switching to a new branch losing changes:
git checkout -b YOUR_NEW_BRANCH_NAME --force
switching to an existing branch losing changes:
git checkout YOUR_BRANCH --force
Easy Answer:
is to force checkout a branch
git checkout -f <branch_name>
Force checking out a branch is telling git to drop all changes you've made in the current branch, and checkout out the desired one.
or in case you're checking out a commit
git checkout -f <commit-hash>
"thought that I could change branches without committing. If so, how can I set this up? If not, how do I get out of this problem?"
The answer to that is No, that's literally the philosophy of Git that you keep track of all changes, and that each node (i.e. commit) has to be up-to-date with the latest changes you've made, unless you've made a new commit of course.
You decided to keep changes?
Then stash them using
git stash
and then to unstash your changes in the desired branch, use
git stash apply
which will apply you changes but keep them in the stash queue too. If you don't want to keep them in the stash stack, then pop them using
git stash pop
That's the equivalent of apply
and then drop
If you want to keep the changes and change the branch in a single line command
git stash && git checkout <branch_name> && git stash pop
Move uncommited changes to a new branch
I created a .gitconfig
alias for this:
[alias]
spcosp = !"git stash push && git checkout \"$@\" && git stash pop --index #"
To change to new-branch-name
, use:
git spcosp new-branch-name
And any non-commited file and index changes will be kept.
For your mental calmness (to have much easier access to changes you have left uncomitted doing a branch switch)
Before switching:
git checkout <next_branch>
use
git stash save "brief description of changes"
instead of the default:
git stash
// or
git stash save
This pays off if your git stash list
is a longer list and must switch back to some previous idea started somewhere there.
Close terminal, delete the folder where your project is, then clone again your project and voilá.
reset --hard
!
To switch to other branch without committing the changes when git stash doesn't work. You can use the below command:
git checkout -f branch-name
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