What you are trying to do is called a sparse checkout, and that feature was added in git 1.7.0 (Feb. 2012). The steps to do a sparse clone are as follows:
mkdir <repo>
cd <repo>
git init
git remote add -f origin <url>
This creates an empty repository with your remote, and fetches all objects but doesn't check them out. Then do:
git config core.sparseCheckout true
Now you need to define which files/folders you want to actually check out. This is done by listing them in .git/info/sparse-checkout, eg:
echo "some/dir/" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
echo "another/sub/tree" >> .git/info/sparse-checkout
Last but not least, update your empty repo with the state from the remote:
git pull origin master
You will now have files "checked out" for some/dir and another/sub/tree on your file system (with those paths still), and no other paths present.
You might want to have a look at the extended tutorial and you should probably read the official documentation for sparse checkout.
Note that this will still download the whole repository from the server – only the checkout is reduced in size. At the moment it is not possible to clone only a single directory. But if you don't need the history of the repository, you can at least save on bandwidth by creating a shallow clone. See udondan's answer below for information on how to combine shallow clone and sparse checkout.
git clonesimplest command?? I used this simple answer. If there are something more simple, please comment – Peter Krauss Nov 1 '14 at 12:00