1

I'm new to git.

I implemented a feature in A way.
I want to try implementing the same feature in B way.

Then I'll probably need some time to evaluate whether the B way was a good idea.
While evaluating it, I'll modify other parts of program.

Suppose, I decide B was bad and A was better, and wanted to come back to A way.
But I'd like to keep the modification to the other parts of the program.

Can this be done in git?

-EDIT-
I'm adding pics to better explain what I'm trying to accomplish

Currently, I'm at the end of a_way(finished implementing A), except I don't know where X is..

                [a_way]
 o---X---a---a---a

I wanna try b_way.
Start from where I am, remove(or comment out) code related to a_way, and implement b_way

   o---X---a---a---a
                    \
                     remove a_way--implement b_way

I'll need some time to evaluate the effectiveness of b_way, and will keep developing other features.

   o---X---a---a---a
                    \
                     remove a_way--implement b_way--develop new features

Now I figure a_way was better than b_way and decide to go back to a_way.

   o---X---a---a---a--------------------------------new features(I wanna end up here)
                    \
                     remove a_way--implement b_way--new features
2
  • The details depend on whether you did A and B in separate branches Dec 1, 2012 at 0:36
  • I'm already at the end of A.
    – eugene
    Dec 1, 2012 at 1:12

3 Answers 3

0

You'll have A and B in separate branches, lets say A and B. Once you decide you want to keep A you'll merge it back into the development branch (usually master, or develop).

git checkout master
git merge A

And you get rid of both branches A and B

git branch -d `A`
git branch -D `B`

Because B is not merged into your development branch and the changes will get lost you have to force the deletion with the uppercase D.

And other parts? They are probably already in our development branch (as said master, or develop, or something) and remain there even after you merge A into.

0

Have you ever commited it? If not , git stash could reveal what you have done after last commit,and then you could try another way. when you wanna the change , just use git stash apply

It's another way different from above, but I do think use branch is much better, since you are new to git, it's very important for you to know this :-)

0

Sounds a lot like you're after rebasing.

One way to do this in git is to have two branches a_way and b_way.

When you've finshed building the two ways you'll have a tree that looks like this

                [a_way]
 o---X---a---a---a
      \
        -b---b---b
                 [b_way]

Where a are the commits to implement A way, and b are the commmits to implement B.

Now assuming you change your branch name to develop once a_way is complete and hack away for a while. You tree will look like this:

              [a_way]
 o---X---a---a---a---d1---d2---d3---d4 [develop]
      \
        -b---b---b
                 [b_way]

Now you decide you want to get rid of a_way and switch to b_way instead.

git rebase --onto b_way a_way develop

will give me:

              [a_way]
 o---X---a---a---a
      \
        -b---b---b---d1'---d2'---d3'---d4' [develop]
                 [b_way]

Note: If develop has merges in it, this will flatten out the merges, I suspect theres a way to preserve the merges, but I have not needed it yet. It will also cause the commit IDs to change, which could cause problems if there are other people basing work off of that.

ADDENDUM

It sounds like your repository looks like this:

                             [a_way]
 o---X             a---a---a
      \           /
        -b---b---b---d1---d2---d3---d4 [develop]
               [b_way]

If you want it to end up like this:

                             [a_way]
 o---X             a---a---a
      \           /         \
        b---b---b           d1'---d2'---d3'---d4' [develop]
               [b_way]

Then the command you'd issue is

 git rebase --onto a_way b_way develop

Or in this case it can be simplified to

git checkout develop
git rebase a_way

ADDENDUM

So your respository actually looks like this:

 o---X---a---a---a [a_way]
                  \
                    da---da---da---b---b---b---f---f---f [develop]
                            [remove_a]   [b_way]

And you want to get to

   o---X---a---a---a---f---f---f [develop]
                    \
                     da---da---da---b---b---b

The command to do this is

git rebase --onto a_way b_way develop

If you dont have branches at the required places you can use the commit SHAs.

git rebase --onto  a_way
4
  • nice pictorial description.(although A&B are switched from my question) I get the concept. Let me make one thing clear. I'm on the master branch.(at the end of b_way in your answer). Now I'm creating A branch for a_way and develop. So a_way will branch out at the end of b_way(as opposed to branching out from common parent). I think this affects the overall strategy I can take? Second question: [a_way] and [develop] in your second picture seems to be associated with specific nodes. Am I interpreting it correctly? [branch_name] can be associated with the specific node in git history?
    – eugene
    Dec 1, 2012 at 1:03
  • @Eugene In git a branch is just a reference to the commit which is currently the latest commit on that branch. A branch name can thus always be resolved to a commit (but not necessarily the same one over time), but you cannot determine on which branch a commit originated.
    – qqx
    Dec 1, 2012 at 1:47
  • What I'm trying to show in the change from d1 to d1' is that the commits SHA will change on rebase, but the content of each commit should essentially stay the same (other than conflicts and detection of already applied changes). Dec 1, 2012 at 8:42
  • I've edited my question to clarify the question. Please take a look.
    – eugene
    Dec 1, 2012 at 12:32

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