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I cloned a repository from master and made some changes to a couple of files. I was asked to commit and create a pull request for each group of changes I have made. For example changes to styles should go in one branch and commit there and have a pull request. Another branch should be changes made to JS files and this has to have its own pull request and branch.

i did git checkout -b [branchName] then git add only relevant files, then git commit and finally git push --set-upstream origin [branchName]. When I did this 3 times, it created 3 separate branches but they all shared the same commits and pull requests.

How do I commit and push relevant changes and files to their own branch so that they have their own commit history and pull request?

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  • any feedback after the answer below?
    – Lino
    Aug 20, 2018 at 17:43
  • I am sure it will work, but I already made the 3 branches and they all have the same commit histories. I need to now somehow make the 3 branches already made only have the commits they were meant to have.
    – Henry Lee
    Aug 20, 2018 at 17:48

1 Answer 1

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There are two options here:

  1. create the 3 branches at the beginning, say branch1, branch2, branch3
  2. do a git checkout branch1, make changes, do git add and then a git commit
  3. create a pull request for branch1
  4. go back to point (2) but in this case use branch2 (and do the same for branch3)

the second option is the following. Suppose you start from master.

  1. create branch1 with checkout -b
  2. make changes, do git add, do git commit
  3. create pull request for the branch
  4. do a git checkout master (so go back in history)
  5. go back to point (1) but in this case use branch2 (same for branch3)
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    It is also possible to git checkout -b branch2 master to make a new branch based on master. This would save the step to checkout master everytime.
    – Tobias K.
    Aug 18, 2018 at 6:13

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