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What are the differences between the following commands?:

git diff foo master   # a 
git diff foo..master  # b
git diff foo...master # c

The diff manual talks about it:

Comparing branches

$ git diff topic master    <1>
$ git diff topic..master   <2>
$ git diff topic...master  <3>
  1. Changes between the tips of the topic and the master branches.
  2. Same as above.
  3. Changes that occurred on the master branch since when the topic branch was started off it.

but isn't totally clear to me.

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5 Answers 5

446

Since I'd already created these images, I thought it might be worth using them in another answer, although the description of the difference between .. (dot-dot) and ... (dot-dot-dot) is essentially the same as in manojlds's answer.

The command git diff typically¹ only shows you the difference between the states of the tree between exactly two points in the commit graph. The .. and ... notations in git diff have the following meanings:

# Left side in the illustration below:
git diff foo..bar
git diff foo bar  # same thing as above

# Right side in the illustration below:
git diff foo...bar
git diff $(git merge-base foo bar) bar  # same thing as above

An illustration of the different ways of specifying commits for git diff

In other words, git diff foo..bar is exactly the same as git diff foo bar; both will show you the difference between the tips of the two branches foo and bar. On the other hand, git diff foo...bar will show you the difference between the "merge base" of the two branches and the tip of bar. The "merge base" is usually the last commit in common between those two branches, so this command will show you the changes that your work on bar has introduced, while ignoring everything that has been done on foo in the mean time.

That's all you need to know about the .. and ... notations in git diff. However...


... a common source of confusion here is that .. and ... mean subtly different things when used in a command such as git log that expects a set of commits as one or more arguments. (These commands all end up using git rev-list to parse a list of commits from their arguments.)

The meaning of .. and ... for git log can be shown graphically as below:

An illustration of the different ways of specifying ranges of commits for git log

So, git rev-list foo..bar shows you everything on branch bar that isn't also on branch foo. On the other hand, git rev-list foo...bar shows you all the commits that are in either foo or bar, but not both. The third diagram just shows that if you list the two branches, you get the commits that are in either one or both of them.

Well, I find that all a bit confusing, anyway, and I think the commit graph diagrams help :)

¹ I only say "typically" since when resolving merge conflicts, for example, git diff will show you a three-way merge.

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  • 1
    I like your diagrams. I came up with my own a while ago too. I have some ideas for my own git diff diagrams that I'll make later.
    – user456814
    Jul 31, 2014 at 23:53
  • 53
    Did someone notice? The effects of .. and ... feel reversed in git diff (compared to git rev-list)! Feb 19, 2015 at 11:47
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    You had me at "That's all you need to know [...]. However...". :-) Git is full of things like this where similar notation and terminology means different things in different contexts; thanks for clarifying this so well. Jul 9, 2015 at 8:53
  • Thanks for mentioning rev-list. I came across this question while looking for a way of doing what rev-list does via rev-parse. Jul 13, 2016 at 16:11
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    @foxiris When ^ comes just before something that refers to a commit, it means "not". So git rev-list bar ^foo means "everything that is in bar, except for anything in foo" Jul 7, 2021 at 8:25
109

My consolidated version of the .. vs ... with diff vs log

Diff vs Log & .. vs ..

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    this would be very good, if only it didn't have so many different colors and set operations mixed up together with ../... stuff. For example in log A...B it is not clear whether the command returns the intersection (white part of the diagram) or the rest of the A-B union (green). It would be more to the point without any set operands and with only 1 color.
    – xealits
    Jan 30, 2018 at 11:41
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    Should this really be diff A..B <—> log A...B, that is, does really diff with 2 dots, correspond to log with 3 (!) dots? Or is there a typo in the image. Looking at how the dots are color coded, seems to me there's a typo in the image. The lower left corner: log A...B should be log A..B, right (?). And log just to the right should be ... not ...
    – KajMagnus
    Jan 9, 2019 at 13:28
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    @KajMagnus actually the red/blue colors are just used to distinguish between 2-dots and 3-dots (regardless of being used with diff or log). The diagram is correct. In the first column, the result of diff with 2-dots is similar to the log with 3-dots (hence the whole purpose diagram to begin with). The diff with 2-dots gives the code changes in both revs down to the divergence point (illustrated by the green bubbles around the commits and the green parts of the van diagrams) while log with 3-dots gives the change logs (commit messages) in both revs down to the divergence point. Nov 7, 2019 at 14:54
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    @KajMagnus It seems confusing and contradictory because git log and git diff both treat ... differently. log uses gitrevisions (see man 7 gitrevisions) to parse the ..., but diff doesn't. diff uses its own definition of ... that is different from the one used by gitrevisions.
    – snath03
    Jul 31, 2022 at 16:37
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    @snath03 It’s been awhile, but I think I used LibreOffice Draw to make it. Aug 1, 2022 at 18:25
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git diff foo master Diff between the tip (head) commits of foo and master.

git diff foo..master Another way of doing the same thing.

git diff foo...master Diff from the common ancestor (git merge-base foo master) of foo and master to the tip of master. In other words, it shows only the changes that master branch has introduced since its common ancestor with foo.

This Learn.GitHub "what a merge would introduce" example (archived) explains when to use the two:

For instance, if you create a ‘dev’ branch and add a function to a file, then go back to your ‘master’ branch and remove a line from the README, and then run something like this:

$ git diff master dev

It will tell you that a function was added from the first file and a line was added to the README. Why? Because on the branch, the README still has the original line, but on ‘master’ you’ve removed it - so directly comparing the snapshots looks like ‘dev’ added it.

What you really want to compare is what ‘dev’ has changed since your branches diverged. To do that, Git has a nice little shorthand:

$ git diff master...dev
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  • 2
    git diff foo...master changes that master branch has introduced since it's common ancestor with foo
    – 0fnt
    Jan 29, 2014 at 15:51
  • @manojlds ok, so different question, if you're at dev branch and commit your changes (the function) and push the changes into a remote dev branch does this mean the visible change is only the function or the function and the readme?
    – David
    Jan 23, 2017 at 13:40
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    If I am not mistaken, GitHub's pull request diff uses the triple dot. Is that right? Mar 21, 2017 at 19:08
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    Broken link to GitHub example page. May 13, 2019 at 22:59
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    I never knew the 3 dot (...) version existed. I've always used git diff $(git merge-base master dev) dev instead of git diff master...dev, but they appear to be equivalent. So, for anyone wondering, apparently git diff master...dev is the same thing as git diff $(git merge-base master dev) dev. Sep 9, 2020 at 19:38
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git diff foo master

will show the differences between the foo and master branch at that point in time

git diff foo..master

will also show the differences between the foo and master branches at that point in time (equivalent to the above).

git diff foo...master

will show all the differences between when the foo branch was made from the master branch and after.

So the first two commands are the same and last one shows a wider view of the diff history.

2

git log tree

The top picture is equivalent to the bottom graph tree

A0 <- A1 <- A2 <- A3 (master)
   \
    C0 <- C1 (test)

A picture is worth a thousand words, the difference between .. ... ^ is shown below.

$ git log master..test
# output C0 C1

$ git log ^master test
# output C0 C1

$ git log master…test
# output A1 A2 A3 C0 C1

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