Reputation: 9049
I have two branches off of master, each one for a different feature, and then I have a synthesis branch that combines the two. I committed something to the synthesis branch, but now I see I would have rather applied that change to one of the branches particular to that feature. Is there a way to do this unapply/apply somewhere else maneuver with git?
Upvotes: 30
Views: 14363
Reputation: 44952
Generally, when I do something like this, I will:
git diff HEAD^ HEAD
)git cherry-pick
to apply the applicable commitI believe there is an easier way, but I prefer this since I use (and remember) the diff/cherry-pick commands better
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 99264
Cherry-pick commit to target branch and reset source branch. Assuming, you want to move the latest commit from source
branch to target
, do:
git checkout target
git cherry-pick source
git checkout source
git reset --hard source^
If the commit wasn't the last, you will have to use git rebase -i
instead of the last command and choose specific commit name for your cherry-pick
.
Upvotes: 42