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Aman Mittal
Aman Mittal

Posted on • Originally published at amanhimself.dev

Stash changes in a git repository with VS Code

git stash is a useful command that temporarily stores current changes in a Git repository without committing them, making it possible to return to them later.

Stash using VS Code

Visual Studio Code (VS Code) is a highly capable code editor that offers many well-thought-out functionalities. Even after using it for years, I still find new things about it.

Using in-built Source Control, you can quickly view the modified files and temporarily save them by stashing them:

  • In VS Code, go to the Source Control tab.
  • Click the three-dotted menu (...) next to Source Control to open a dropdown menu.
  • In the menu, select Stash > Stash (Include Untracked).
  • That's it. The file changes are now stashed locally.

Stashing changes locally using VS Code

Bring the latest stashed changes to a branch

Let's assume you've now created a new branch where you want to bring those changes that are saved temporarily.

  • In VS Code's Source Control, open the dropdown menu.
  • Select Stash > Apply Latest Stash.

Stashing changes locally using VS Code

You can now bring those changes to the current branch and commit them.

Conclusion

Stashing is particularly useful when you want to fix something and keep those changes around so you can return to them later. Collecting the stashed changes can result in a new branch, where local changes can be brought later.

Top comments (2)

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mrlinxed profile image
Mr. Linxed

Hi! You seem to have some broken images.

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amanhimself profile image
Aman Mittal

Thanks for catching that and reaching out! I forgot to update that part. Fixed it now πŸ™‡