Git: Create a branch from unstaged/uncommitted changes on master

Solution 1:

No need to stash.

Update 2020 / Git 2.23


Git 2.23 adds the new switch subcommand, in an attempt to clear some of the confusion caused by the overloaded usage of checkout (switching branches, restoring files, detaching HEAD, etc.)

Starting with this version of Git, replace the git checkout command below with:

git switch -c <new-branch>

The behavior remains unchanged.

Before Update 2020 / Git 2.23


git checkout -b new_branch_name

does not touch your local changes. It just creates the branch from the current HEAD and sets the HEAD there. So I guess that's what you want.

--- Edit to explain the result of checkout master ---

Are you confused because checkout master does not discard your changes?

Since the changes are only local, git does not want you to lose them too easily. Upon changing branch, git does not overwrite your local changes. The result of your checkout master is:

M   testing

, which means that your working files are not clean. git did change the HEAD, but did not overwrite your local files. That is why your last status still show your local changes, although you are on master.

If you really want to discard the local changes, you have to force the checkout with -f.

git checkout master -f

Since your changes were never committed, you'd lose them.

Try to get back to your branch, commit your changes, then checkout the master again.

git checkout new_branch
git commit -a -m"edited"
git checkout master
git status

You should get a M message after the first checkout, but then not anymore after the checkout master, and git status should show no modified files.

--- Edit to clear up confusion about working directory (local files)---

In answer to your first comment, local changes are just... well, local. Git does not save them automatically, you must tell it to save them for later. If you make changes and do not explicitly commit or stash them, git will not version them. If you change HEAD (checkout master), the local changes are not overwritten since unsaved.

Solution 2:

Try:

git stash
git checkout -b new-branch
git stash apply

Solution 3:

Two things you can do:

git checkout -b sillyname
git commit -am "silly message"
git checkout - 

or

git stash -u
git branch sillyname stash@{0}

(git checkout - <-- the dash is a shortcut for the previous branch you were on )

(git stash -u <-- the -u means that it also takes unstaged changes )

Solution 4:

If you want your current uncommited changes on the current branch to move to a new branch, use the following command to create a new branch and copy the uncommitted changes automatically.

git checkout -b branch_name

This will create a new branch from your current branch (assuming it to be master), copy the uncommited changes and switch to the new branch.

Add files to stage & commit your changes to the new branch.

git add .
git commit -m "First commit"

Since, a new branch is created, before pushing it to remote, you need to set the upstream. Use the below command to set the upstream and push it to remote.

git push --set-upstream origin feature/feature/NEWBRANCH

Once you hit this command, a new branch will be created at the remote and your new local branch will be pushed to remote.

Now, if you want to throw away your uncommited changes from master branch, use:

git checkout master -f

This will throw away any uncommitted local changes on checkout.