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I have a large file where, somewhere in the middle, there is a function that I know has been modified several times. git annotate or blame will show the most recent commit for each line but if I'm right, it will show only the most recent one, not a list of other commits that affected that line before.

So is there a command in Git where I could say something like show me commits that affected lines 250..260 in file XYZ?

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6 Answers 6

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As suggested in one of the comments in Git - how do I view the change history of a method/function?, doing

git gui blame <file>

and then right-clicking a line and selecting Blame Parent Commit does what I need.

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phpStorm can do this. Select the lines -> right-click -> Git -> Show History for Selection

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  • 1
    what an awesome feature! Thanks for bringing it to my attention!!
    – pymarco
    Mar 25, 2014 at 21:22
  • intellij does it too
    – David Mann
    Feb 4, 2016 at 19:52
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git show $(git blame XYZ -L 250,260 | awk '{print $1}')

Every line of code is always documented. via @mislav

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  • If only the results were chronological. Nov 24, 2014 at 22:22
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I think that's not possible. You will need to write a script around git blame. You can find a bash example of such a script on GitHub.

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Select line -> Right-click->Git->Annotate

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  • 2
    this doesnt answer the question as it will only show the most recent commit to affect a single line.
    – David Mann
    Feb 4, 2016 at 19:56
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this fonctionnality made me switch to IntelliJ Idea. With IntelliJ you can select lines, right clic -> git -> Show history for selection enter image description here

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