513

I know I can link to a specific line number on a file on a GitHub repository (I'm sure I've seen this before)...

How can I do this?

9 Answers 9

774

Don't just link to the line numbers! Be sure to use the canonical URL too. Otherwise when that file is updated, you'll have a URL that points to the wrong lines!

How to make a permanent link to the right lines:

Click on the line number you want (like line 18), and the URL in your browser will get a #L18 tacked onto the end. You literally click on the 18 at the left side, not the line of code. Looks like this:

line 18 selected

And now your browser's URL looks like this:

https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/README.md?plain=1#L18

If you want multiple lines selected, simply hold down the Shift key and click a second line number, like line 20. Looks like this:

Enter image description here

And now your browser's URL looks like this:

https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/README.md?plain=1#L18-L20

Here's the important part:

Now get the canonical URL for that particular commit by pressing the Y key. The URL in your browser will change to become something like this:

https://github.com/git/git/blob/5bdb7a78adf2a2656a1915e6fa656aecb45c1fc3/README#L18-L20

That link contains the actual SHA-1 hash for that particular commit, rather than the current version of the file on master. That means that this link will work forever and not point to lines 18-20 of whatever future version of that file might contain.

Now bask in the glow of your new permanent link. ;-)

After this answer was originally written, watashiSHUN pointed out that GitHub has now made it easier to get the permanent link. A ... menu is provided on the left after you select one or more lines, like this:

GitHub permalink menu

Please see watashiSHUN's answer too.

Note that GitHub does not show line numbers for some "renderable" files, like Markdown files. Adding ?plain=1 to the url will show the source file with line numbers, e.g. https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/README.md?plain=1.

19
  • 3
    The y key does nothing for me. Has this been changed? Trying from Google Chrome Dev Channel.
    – k0pernikus
    Dec 5, 2015 at 23:39
  • 4
    It still works... Docs still say to use y key too... help.github.com/articles/getting-permanent-links-to-files
    – broc.seib
    Dec 6, 2015 at 16:23
  • 4
    that shift+click the second line for a block is a good one! I was manually editing the URL to add the second line :). follow up question though, what if I wanted lines 2, 4, and from 17-22 highlighted? Is that possible or can I only highlight one block at a time?
    – penchant
    Mar 24, 2016 at 23:33
  • 5
    @tr3buchet I just pinged github support -- it's not possible at the moment. They said they will consider the feature, but no promises. I offered that the format be something like L18-L20,L29, and that a person could CTRL-click to add non-consecutive lines. I think your idea is a great suggestion and would be very useful.
    – broc.seib
    Mar 25, 2016 at 14:39
  • 2
    What if README is README.md?
    – zwcloud
    Apr 11, 2018 at 5:21
89

broc.seib has a sophisticated answer, but I just want to point out that instead of pressing Y to get the permanent link, GitHub now has a very simple UI that helps you to achieve it.

  1. Select a line by clicking on the line number or select multiple lines by downholding Shift (the same as how you select multiple folders in File Explorer):

    Enter image description here

  2. On the right hand corner of the first line you selected, expand ... and click copy permalink

    Enter image description here

  3. That's it. A link with the selected lines and a commit hash is copied to your clipboard:

    https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/c82b7f332aff606af6c9c163da75f1e86514125e/Doc/Makefile#L1-L4

1
  • This ... does not show up in commit diffs, unfortunately.
    – Dad
    Jan 18, 2023 at 19:00
34

See:

A permalink to a code snippet is pasted into a pull request comment field

You can you use permalinks to include code snippets in issues, PRs, etc.

References:

Creating a permanent link to a code snippet

5
  • 5
    Pretty nice gif! Jun 13, 2018 at 14:08
  • Sorry for the off-topic, but what tool do you use to make it? Jun 13, 2018 at 14:10
  • @GiovanniBenussi It is from GitHub. See the link. Jun 13, 2018 at 14:18
  • I mean for the gif :-P hahaha Jun 13, 2018 at 16:40
  • 1
    @GiovanniBenussi I don't know what reversiblean used but occasionally I make gifs like this using a nice tool called "screentogif",you should try it out github.com/NickeManarin/ScreenToGif
    – SamGamgee
    Jun 25, 2018 at 8:01
23

Click the line number, and then copy and paste the link from the address bar. To select a range, click the number, and then shift click the later number.

Alternatively, the links are a relatively simple format, just append #L<number> to the end for that specific line number, using the link to the file. Here's a link to the third line of the git repository's README:

https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/README#L3

Screenshot with highlighted line and the modified address line

2
  • 3
    Don't forget that if the file changes, this URL will still point to line 3, which could contain new code, and may not be what you wanted! I've offered another solution that yields a permanent link. Hint: just press y. ;-)
    – broc.seib
    Jul 8, 2015 at 2:36
  • 5
    The link is broken
    – pmrotule
    May 3, 2017 at 9:48
7

Many editors (but also see the Commands section below) support linking to a file's line number or range on GitHub or Bitbucket (or others). Here's a short list:

Atom

Open on GitHub

Emacs

git-link

Sublime Text

GitLink

Vim

gitlink-vim


Commands

  • git-link - Git subcommand for getting a repository browser link to a Git object
  • ghwd - Open the GitHub URL that matches your shell's current branch and working directory
3

Related to how to link to the README.md file of a GitHub repository to a specific line number of code

You have three cases:

  1. We can link to (custom commit)

    But Link will always link to an old file version, which will not contain new updates in the master branch for example. Example:

    https://github.com/username/projectname/blob/b8d94367354011a0470f1b73c8f135f095e28dd4/file.txt#L10
    
  2. We can link to (custom branch) like (master-branch). But the link will always link to the latest file version which will contain new updates. Due to new updates, the link may point to an invalid business line number. Example:

    https://github.com/username/projectname/blob/master/file.txt#L10
    
  3. GitHub can not make an auto-link to any file either to (custom commit) nor (master-branch). Because of following business issues:

    • line business meaning, to link to it in the new file
    • length of target highlighted code which can be changed
1
  • It's good that someone pointed this out. Wish it was easy to find a compromise, like binding to line and forward tracking where it's currently in the new version. OR at least have link that points to wherever the certain substring is needed.
    – vintprox
    Dec 4, 2021 at 17:37
1

For a line in a pull request.

https://github.com/foo/bar/pull/90/files#diff-ce6bf647d5a531e54ef0502c7fe799deR27
https://github.com/foo/bar/pull/
90 <- PR number
/files#diff-
ce6bf647d5a531e54ef0502c7fe799de <- MD5 has of file name from repo root
R <- Which side of the diff to reference (merge-base or head). Can be L or R.
27 <- Line number

This will take you to a line as long as L and R are correct. I am not sure if there is a way to visit L OR R. I.e If the PR adds a line you must use R. If it removes a line you must use L.

From: Generate line pointer URL into Github Pull Request

1

Linking to a line number on a GitHub wiki page

I was having some trouble finding how to link to a specific location on a GitHub wiki page and ended up finding this out. This might be common knowledge, but I didn't know this and someone else might find it useful.

When browsing a wiki file you can put your mouse over a specific header text and a link icon will appear. Clicking this link icon, your browser navigation URL will be updated (example: https://github.com/user/repository/wiki/Test#title-1). This would be the link to that specific location in the wiki file.

Enter image description here

1

If you want to get a preview rendering of a Markdown code snippet, after copying the link as mentioned in the other answer, remove the ?plain=1 parameter from the link.

For example, the following will show a plain text link:

github.com/<organization>/<repository>/blob/<branch_name>/README.md?plain=1#L14

After removing the ?plain=1 parameter, it will show the preview of the code:

github.com/<organization>/<repository>/blob/<branch_name>/README.md#L14

A link to a Markdown with preview

See GitHub documentation: Creating a permanent link to a code snippet for more information.

2
  • Linking to rendered markdown file (preview) doesn't work for me. It shows the file but does not scroll to the selected line. Linking to raw file (plain=1) works. Any thoughts? Nov 13, 2022 at 7:29
  • @grubykarol since markdown is rendered on github.com, is not possible to link to a line in rendered state, but if you, or the people you want to share the link with, use chrome there is an alternative: use the copy link to highlight feature on the markdown file in rendered state over the selected text
    – manus
    Jul 4, 2023 at 20:12

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.