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Home/ Questions/Q 46127
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T15:55:02+00:00 2026-05-10T15:55:02+00:00

I suppose it allows for moving changes from one branch to the next but

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I suppose it allows for moving changes from one branch to the next but that’s what cherry picking is for and if you’re not making a commit of your changes, perhaps you shouldn’t be moving them around?

I have on occasion applied the wrong stash at the wrong branch, which left me wondering about this question.

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  1. 2026-05-10T15:55:03+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 3:55 pm

    As mentioned, if you want a “per-branch stash,” you really want a new branch forking off from the existing branch.

    Also, besides the already mentioned fact that the stash allows you to pull into a branch that you’re working on, it also allows you to switch branches before you have committed everything. This is useful not for cherry-picking in the usual sense so much as for cherry-picking your working copy.

    F.ex., while working on a feature branch, I will often notice minor bugs or cosmetic impurities in the code that aren’t relevant to that branch. Well, I just fix those right away. When time comes to commit, I selectively commit the relevant changes but not the fixes and cosmetics. Instead I stash those, which allows me to switch to my minor-fixes-on-stable branch, where I can then apply the stash and commit each minor fix separately. (Depending on the changes in question, I will also stash some of them yet again, to switch to a different feature branch, where I apply those.)

    This allows me to go deep into programming mode when I am working, and not worry about proper librarianship of my code. Then when I take a mental break, I can go back and carefully sort my changes into all the right shelves.

    If the stash weren’t global, this type of workflow would be far more difficult to do.

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