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Command: git record
Available since v0.4.0.
git record
is a replacement for git add
and git commit
.
To commit the unstaged changes in your working copy, run git record
. You can pass the -m
/--message
option to specify a commit message on the command-line. If no commit message is provided, your editor is opened to specify a commit message, similar to git commit
. This may change in the future, in that git record
may auto-generate a commit message if you don't provide one.
You don't need to stage your changes before committing them; git record
behaves differently than git commit
in that respect. In general, it doesn't expect that you stage your changes before committing them, although it supports it for compatibility with Git:
- When running
git record
with staged changes, those staged changes will be committed. - Otherwise, if there are no staged changes, all unstaged changes will be committed.
- This is similar to
git commit -a
. - This does not include changes to untracked files. You will still need to stage those with
git add
.
- This is similar to
- To commit just a subset of changes (as if you staged them), select the changes interactively (see below).
- This is similar to
git commit --interactive
/git commit --patch
, but with a TUI.
- This is similar to
To update the contents of an existing commit, see git amend
. To update the message of an existing commit, see git reword
.
To commit a subset of your unstaged changes, run git record
with the -i
/--interactive
option. This will open a TUI to interactively select lines to include in the commit. Unselected lines will remain as unstaged changes in the working copy.
Warning: The interactive commit interface is not complete, and doesn't support some use-cases, such as binary or moved files. You should only use it for simple interactive selection.
To start a new branch, run git record
with the -c
/--create
option to create a new branch with the provided name and commit to it. If the branch already exists, an error is produced and the commit is aborted.
Changed in v0.7.0: The
-c
/--create
option used to be called-b
/--branch
.
Oftentimes, you may want to start a new line of development without modifying the current branch (such as if you are on the main branch and don't want to commit to it directly). To first detach from the current branch, run git record
with the -d
/--detach
option.
Sometimes, you may want to go back to a previous location in the commit stack and add a new commit. To do so, you can run git sw <previous commit>
(or git prev
, etc.), then run git record
with the -I
/--insert
option. All child commits in the stack will be moved on top of the newly-created commit.
To insert a commit before other commits after it's already been made, see Insert a commit in a stack.
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