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GIT: Using the stash

·406 words·2 mins· ·
Blog Git Stash
Ariejan de Vroom
Author
Ariejan de Vroom
Jack of all Trades, Professional Software Craftsman
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I bet the following has happened to you: you are happily working on a project and are in the middle of something. You are not ready to commit your changes, because you your tests don’t pass yet. Then your client calls with a bug report that needs to be fixed right now. (You know how clients can be.)

So, what do you do? Throw away your current changes to make the patch? Checkout a clean copy of your project to make the changes? No! You just stash your changes away, and make the patch! Afterward you grab your changes back and continue work.

Git features The Stash, which is as much as a good place to store uncommitted changes. When you stash you changes, the will be stored, and your working copy will be reverted to HEAD (the last commit revision) of your code.

When you restore your stash, you changes are reapplied and you continue working on your code.

Stash your current changes
#

$ git stash save <optional message for later reference>
Saved "WIP on master: e71813e..."</pre>

List current stashes
#

Yes, you can have more than one!! The stash works like a stack. Every time you save a new stash, it’s put on top of the stack.

$ git stash list
stash@{0}: WIP on master: e71813e...

Note the stash@{0} part? That’s your stash ID, you’ll need it to restore it later on. Let’s do that right now. The stash ID changes with every stash you make. stash@{0} refers to the last stash you made.

Apply a stash
#

git stash apply stash@{0}

You may notice the stash is still there after you have applied it. You can drop it if you don’t need it any more.

git stash drop stash@{0}

Or, because the stash acts like a stack, you can pop off the last stash you saved:

git stash pop

If you want to wipe all your stashes away, run the ‘clear’ command:

git stash clear

It may very well be that you don’t use stashes that often. If you just want to quickly stash your changes to restore them later, you can leave out the stash ID.

$ git stash
# ...
$ git stash pop

Feel free to experiment with the stash before using it on some really important work.

Please leave a comment if you like this article, and would like to see more Git related stuff here on Ariejan.net.

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