this post was submitted on 10 Jul 2023
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Use
switch
, boomer!What's the difference? Genuine question
Well one starts with an s, the other with a c... :P
They changed the command to clarify what it does, checkout was / is used for switching branches as well as branch creation but has connotations of doing some locking in the repo from older vcs software.... I think. the new commands are switch and branch. check the docs
Idk what the deal is with switch, I thought it wasn't supposed to be creating branches but right in the docs there's a flag for it???
Im the kind of user that just deletes .git and starts over when I f up the repo, so take my git advice with a tablespoon of salt.
I switch to using switch since
git switch
auto-creates the local branch from the remote branch, if the branch doesn't exist yet, and a remote branch with the corresponding name exists.Also
git switch -c
for auto-creating a new branch, even if there is no remote branch for itIf I remember it correctly,
git checkout
also automatically creates the local branch from the remote branch (of the same name), and sets up tracking.