4 points

I have started using work trees recently as well, but have a different flow to the author and everyone else. I typically use two work trees, one on main that I do all my work on. That is work and create commits directly on the main branch.

But then to push I have another clean work tree that I use to create and switch branches on then use that to create working sets of changes by cherry-picking from master into different branches to push and create PRS from. And never edit files on this work tree so that I never have to stash anything.

Then just git pull --rebase=interactive origin/master to remove merged commits from master as they get merged upstream. This let’s me build on pending PRs or switch to other tasks at will and just sort them into separate PRs as required.

I like this as when working on a feature I often find a refactoring I need to do, so can isolate that refactoring and create a PR with only that change while continuing to work on the feature on top of the PR.

Or have some temp debugging stuff locally that I want to use across changes that will end up in different PRs without having to copy paste them between branches.

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3 points

I guess I don’t understand this feature. Is there an advantage in using worktrees rather than multiple clones? Is it mainly for IDE integration?

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6 points
*

I use worktrees and I wondered the same question, so far here’s what I like:

git worktrees list can show all the worktrees, you have for this same repo (not crazy value, I know)

git fetch applies to all your worktrees

git stash / apply can work across worktrees, so I can stash in one and apply it to another

You’re limited to a specific branch per worktree and many don’t like that but I typically work from a detached HEAD anyways.

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3 points

And cherry-pick commits done on different work trees without syncing them first. Or rebase or mergeworkk done on one work tree with others. Or check commit logs or diff them.

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4 points

The different worktrees share the same .git state. The article has an example where the author uses one tree for writing code and one for fuzzing it. If they used multiple clones they’d have to push from the writing directory and pull from the fuzzing directory to get new commits to fuzz but with worktrees this state synchronization between different git directories happens automatically.

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1 point

It’s just clones but with shortcuts, I don’t see the point of m

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2 points

You don’t see the point of making use of shortcuts?

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1 point

For navigating trough messy systems or unusual places, yes. But you know where you keep your repos. To me, this is bloat.

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2 points

did you just shortened “them” to “m”?

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3 points

Nah, I just think the ‘m’ should be scrapped from the alphabet

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3 points

It’s just them with shortcuts, they didn’t see the point of m

😏

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1 point

multiple clones

Why would you do this to yourself?

The benefit is that you have everything collected in one place. You can jump between any of your local branches, and there’s no confusion about which state the branches are in.

If you have multiple clones, then there’s the risk that you’ve forgotten to sync main in all your different clones.

Then there’s also the problem that all the generated binaries will be out of sync. You still have 5 copies of each binary.

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2 points

They wrote they’re using . as placeholder commit messages.

I use f for such [f]ollowup/[f]ixup commits, and a for [a]dditional code/components/changesets. Both keys are trivial to enter. When cleaning it up after, f commits are typically squashed into previous ones, and a commits get a description and/or serve as a base for squashing.

I can see . working well as well, but having a more obvious character (with vertical height/substance) seems preferable.

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2 points
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I commit and squash before pushing the branch if I have to change what I’m working on. Keeps the changes on remote so I don’t lose progress. Not like a PR is open if the work I isn’t ready anyway.

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