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authorEric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com>2020-09-06 20:02:22 -0400
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2020-09-06 18:53:56 -0700
commitdccadad736c801e924c7c14e8c6bd1a6e15e70e5 (patch)
treeb34945bd4ffe0a691f8781812b3c60a340de80f1 /wt-status.c
parentc670aa47dff9829360cc69174f8dd0d82f096011 (diff)
downloadgit-dccadad736c801e924c7c14e8c6bd1a6e15e70e5.tar.gz
git-worktree.txt: discuss branch-based vs. throwaway worktrees
By default, `git worktree add` creates a new worktree associated with a particular branch (which may have been created automatically if not specified explicitly on the command-line). It is also convenient to create throwaway worktrees not associated with any branch, which can be handy when making experimental changes or doing testing. However, the latter use-case may not be obvious to newcomers since the high-level description of worktrees talks only about checking out "more than one branch at a time". Therefore, enhance the description to to discuss both use-cases. A secondary goal of highlighting the distinction between branch-based and throwaway worktrees is to help newcomers understand that the simplest form `git worktree add <path>` automatically creates a new branch. Stating this early in the description, may help newcomers avoid creating branches without realizing they are doing so, and later wondering why `git branch --list` shows branches the user did not intentionally create. Signed-off-by: Eric Sunshine <sunshine@sunshineco.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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