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I have a file let's call it File A. I type something on the first line. Then i commit it on the master branch.

Now i make another Branch lets call it BranchA. Now i open file remove what i have written on the first line type something else on the same line and commit it on the BranchA.

Now i checkout to the master branch and then merge the BranchA with the master branch. The Merge is completed successfully and when i open the file the line on BranchA has overwritten the line on master Branch.

Why is this happening shouldn't it give me a conflict because i am changing the same line on both the branches and then trying to merge them

1 Answer 1

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The scenario you are describing is expected behaviour.

As far as I understand your question you have a commit graph which could look like this:

o---o <- master
     \
      o <- A

If you now merge A into master git will do a fast-forward merge, which effectivly just changes the commit master points at.
As there are no further changes on master which diverge from A there is no need to merge.


Now let's assume we have the following commit graph:

o---o---o <- master
     \
      o <- A

In this case your branches diverge. You have changes on master which aren't on A and you have changes on A which aren't on master. This is a typical situation where a merge is necessary.

You can take a look at the Basic Branching and Merging chapter of the gitpro book which covers all this and more.

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  • You mean that instead of merging the two commits, git directly moves the commit from other branch to the master branch right ?
    – Win Coder
    Oct 23, 2014 at 12:04
  • 1
    Git doesn't move any commit. In git branches are merely a reference on a specific commit. You can even take a look at them if you open a file in .git/refs/heads. They are literally a file which contains a the SHA1 key identifying the commit. Git just changes this reference. Oct 23, 2014 at 12:12
  • In git each commit saves a refence on its parent commit (or parent commits, this defines a merge commit). This way your history builds. Oct 23, 2014 at 12:13
  • aha so in this case git just moves the reference to commits from BranchA to the master branch ?
    – Win Coder
    Oct 23, 2014 at 12:16
  • Exactly. Git just changes the reference in master to point at the same commit as A. Oct 23, 2014 at 12:17

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