885

Using Git, how can you find the difference between the current and the last version?

git diff last version:HEAD
3
  • 1
    If you use GitHub for the cloud location of your repo it is very simple: navigate to your project and click on the heading "commits" in the table that displays your project May 29, 2017 at 19:20
  • 3
    The meaning of "current and the last version" really should be clarified in the question. Feb 5, 2019 at 16:36
  • You may want to look at this discussion too: stackoverflow.com/questions/46446901/…
    – Alma Rahat
    Oct 9, 2022 at 13:13

14 Answers 14

1549

I don't really understand the meaning of "last version".

As the previous commit can be accessed with HEAD^, I think that you are looking for something like:

git diff HEAD^ HEAD

That also can be applied for a :commithash

git diff $commithash^ $commithash

As of Git 1.8.5, @ is an alias for HEAD, so you can use:

git diff @~..@

The following will also work:

git show

If you want to know the diff between head and any commit you can use:

git diff commit_id HEAD

And this will launch your visual diff tool (if configured):

git difftool HEAD^ HEAD

Since comparison to HEAD is default you can omit it (as pointed out by Orient):

git diff @^
git diff HEAD^
git diff commit_id

Warnings

  • @ScottF and @Panzercrisis explain in the comments that on Windows the ~ character must be used instead of ^.
11
  • I wanted something like committed version and version before it...git diff head head-1
    – Rajeev
    Mar 28, 2012 at 9:13
  • 7
    As of Git 1.8.5, @ is an alias for HEAD. And since ~ and ^ are the same when only going one commit back, I find git diff @~..@ much easier to type.
    – Andrew
    Sep 22, 2014 at 1:47
  • 101
    @Andrew git show is easier still, since @~..@ is the default thing to show.
    – amalloy
    Nov 6, 2014 at 4:28
  • 6
    The problem with git show is that if HEAD is a merge commit you won't get what you expect since the merge commit itself may not have any changes itself. git diff HEAD^ HEAD will show the actual changes between the versions Apr 24, 2018 at 7:17
  • 3
    Remark: For Windows Command Prompt, ^ is an escape character. Could type ^^ to represent a ^ Feb 27, 2020 at 3:34
196

Assuming "current version" is the working directory (uncommitted modifications) and "last version" is HEAD (last committed modifications for the current branch), simply do

git diff HEAD

Credit for the following goes to user Cerran.

And if you always skip the staging area with -a when you commit, then you can simply use git diff.

Summary

  1. git diff shows unstaged changes.
  2. git diff --cached shows staged changes.
  3. git diff HEAD shows all changes (both staged and unstaged).

Source: git-diff(1) Manual Page – Cerran

3
  • 18
    And if you always skip the staging area with -a when you commit, then you can simply use git diff. <1> git diff shows unstaged changes. <2> git diff --cached shows staged changes. <3> git diff HEAD shows all changes (both staged and unstaged). Source: git-diff(1) Manual Page
    – Cerran
    Feb 20, 2014 at 13:16
  • What is the name of "the current unstaged version" in git? Is there actually a name? Jan 17, 2019 at 8:48
  • git diff HEAD --stat if you're looking for the number of lines changed. Jul 14, 2022 at 1:34
142

As pointed out on a comment by amalloy, if by "current and last versions" you mean the last commit and the commit before that, you could simply use

git show
2
  • 16
    Use git show HEAD~1 to show the last-but-one commit, and git show HEAD~2, etc. for older commits. Show just a single file via git show HEAD~2 my_file. Mar 3, 2016 at 10:43
  • Perhaps address RubenLaguna's note in the answer? (But without "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today.) Mar 30, 2022 at 16:50
67

Difference between last but one commit and last commit (plus current state, if any):

git diff HEAD~

or even (easier to type)

git diff @~

where @ is the synonim for HEAD of current branch and ~ means "give me the parent of mentioned revision".

7
  • I quite like git diff HEAD^ (rather than the equivalent HEAD~ form). It's a tad easier to remember for an "old git" like myself ;-)
    – sxc731
    Jul 12, 2016 at 15:44
  • 3
    The carrot is an issue in some terminals. Nice to have the option Jan 22, 2018 at 19:00
  • 1
    Answer could be improved by explaining what the ~ and @ mean.
    – Bob Stein
    Jan 17, 2019 at 20:16
  • 1
    If we just want to check what is committed in the last commit, don't use this (as dirty changes affect the diff). A shorter syntax to really diff HEAD^ HEAD should be git diff @^!. See git-scm.com/docs/gitrevisions for r1^! Feb 27, 2020 at 3:39
  • @JohnnyWong Thank you for clarification. I mentioned "current state" to not confuse readers. Feb 27, 2020 at 4:54
63

You can do it this way too:

Compare with the previous commit

git diff --name-status HEAD~1..HEAD

Compare with the current and previous two commits

git diff --name-status HEAD~2..HEAD
18

Just use the cached flag if you added, but haven't committed yet:

git diff --cached --color
2
  • 1
    This was exactly what I was looking for when I found this question. Thanks! Dec 16, 2016 at 18:54
  • 1
    "cached" as a synonym for "staged"? (Or "staged changes" or ""indexed""?) Mar 30, 2022 at 16:47
14

Quick and simple, assuming you're in the master:

    git diff (checkout_id):file.txt file.txt

Example:

    git diff asdfioei91819280din198:file.txt file.txt
2
  • 2
    Note that after the (checkout_id): you need a relative path to the filename from the root of the repo. For me I tried the above from the directory the file was in, and it failed, until I changed it to git diff 3d44feb544150cf35b2a99d5917e294e10596f8e:./file.txt file.txt Also, OP's original intent isn't clear, but this answer is the only one that addresses if you want the "difference between the current and last version" OF A FILE. I originally tried git diff HEAD~1 -- file.txt but it didn't work because last change to that file was 10 commits ago.
    – Starman
    Oct 7, 2020 at 15:57
  • 1
    This was exactly what I was looking for when I found this question. Thanks! Mar 19, 2022 at 14:45
9

If you want the changes for the last n commits, you can use the following:

git diff HEAD~n

So for the last 5 commits (count including your current commit) from the current commit, it would be:

git diff HEAD~5

8

Firstly, use "git log" to list the logs for the repository.

Now, select the two commit IDs, pertaining to the two commits. You want to see the differences (example - Top most commit and some older commit (as per your expectation of current-version and some old version)).

Next, use:

git diff <commit_id1> <commit_id2>

or

git difftool <commit_id1> <commit_id2>
8

If the top commit is pointed to by HEAD then you can do something like this:

commit1 -> HEAD
commit2 -> HEAD~1
commit3 -> HEAD~2

Diff between the first and second commit:

git diff HEAD~1 HEAD

Diff between first and third commit:

git diff HEAD~2 HEAD

Diff between second and third commit:

git diff HEAD~2 HEAD~1

And so on...

2

I use Bitbucket with the Eclipse IDE with the Eclipse EGit plugin installed.

I compare a file from any version of its history (like SVN).

Menu Project Explorer → File → right click → TeamShow in history.

This will bring the history of all changes on that file. Now Ctrl click and select any two versions→ "Compare with each other".

2

This will also work for tags (remove the 'uniq' below and other parts if you need to see all changes):

 git diff v1.58 HEAD 

The below is the same, and that could be useful for continuous integration (CI) for microservices in a monolithic repository:

git diff v1.58 HEAD  --name-only | sort -u | awk 'BEGIN {FS="/"} {print $1}' | uniq
<Folder Name> 

(Credit - https://dzone.com/articles/build-test-and-deploy-apps-independently-from-a-mo)

1

to show individual changes in a commit, to head.

git show HEAD~0

to show accumulated changes in a commit, to head.

git diff HEAD~0

where 0 is the desired number of commits.

2
  • might want to use HEAD, in caps Oct 6 at 17:17
  • 1
    thanks for the comment, I have edited the answer.
    – DeyaEldeen
    Oct 6 at 22:15
0

If last versions means last tag, and current versions means HEAD (current state), it's just a diff with the last tag:

Looking for tags:

$ git tag --list
...
v20.11.23.4
v20.11.25.1
v20.11.25.2
v20.11.25.351

The last tag would be:

$ git tag --list | tail -n 1
v20.11.25.351

Putting it together:

tag=$(git tag --list | tail -n 1)
git diff $tag

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