At a previous job I had to review my coworkers code and continue developing a feature. For that I used to just checkout a whole new clone of the project in a review/
folder. From there I could safely review the code locally.
Now I'm working on a large rewrite. This time I need to review how the current system operates. Here is an alternative way to do that:
# git worktree add <path> [<branch>]
git worktree add legacy develop
If you cd
to legacy, your git commands will be in the context of that branch. A nice pro-tip to keep in your back pocket!
Top comments (2)
I like worktrees for writing tests for one branch while tests are running in the "main" branch (full suite of integration tests, so about an hour of runtime). But I end up defaulting to just having 1 active branch and using gitlab's MR diff view for reviews.
your *
:P