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I have a different git repository for my office and a different git repo for my hobby projects.

When I do git config --global user.name the user name changes globally and this creates a confusion of committing to a repo with user name.

Hence the question is how can i have the same username across all my hobby projects and the same username across the office projects. I use the same machine to work on both the places.

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2 Answers 2

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Just use --local instead of --global. In fact, local is the default so you can just do

git config user.email [email protected]
git config user.name "whatf hobbyist"

in one repo, and

git config user.email [email protected]
git config user.name "whatf at work"

in another repo

The values will then be stored in in the .git/config for that repo rather than your global configuration file.

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  • 1
    @mikej git commit --author= allows that syntax, but not setting through config or environment variables.
    – Joe
    Mar 9, 2013 at 4:48
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    Can't we have something like .ssh/config Host *.workdomain email [email protected] Host *github.com [email protected] ?
    – Sérgio
    Sep 29, 2014 at 21:14
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    When I do this, it does not ask me for my password and does not allow me to push to the repository; it just assumes I'm using the global. This did not work for me.
    – Pro Q
    Feb 18, 2018 at 21:00
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    Ah, yes. My issue is with pushing to a remote. Committing works just fine for me. Thank you.
    – Pro Q
    Feb 18, 2018 at 21:33
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    @ProQ, if you're using SSH for auth, check out the instructions in this gist. be sure to read the first couple of comments though, because the gist itself doesn't clearly explain how SSH hosts work..
    – user909694
    Aug 18, 2018 at 21:28
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Omit the --global from your call to git config:

git config user.name "A. U. Thor"

This will set the property in the current repository.

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