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Home/ Questions/Q 1040967
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T15:17:24+00:00 2026-05-16T15:17:24+00:00

I’ve just started using Git and find that whilst I am implementing a feature

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I’ve just started using Git and find that whilst I am implementing a feature in a branch, I will encounter some bug that really needs to be pushed to the trunk as soon as possible. In order to do so, I use checkout to switch back to the trunk, make my changes and commit them. I now have a trunk that is bug free.

Unfortunately, my branch needs to have this bug fixed as well. As the feature is not complete, I can’t just merge the branch back into the trunk. How can I alter my branch so that it receives the changes I made to the trunk?

If it matters, I am developing on my own and so only have a single repository to worry about.

I am using TortoiseGit so instructions specific to that would be helpful but not necessary.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T15:17:25+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:17 pm

    Make sure you have your branch checked out (git checkout branch-name) and run

    git rebase master

    And resolve any conflicts that arrive.

    If you aren’t sure what these commands do, try not using TortoiseGit and use the terminal. It will help you really understand the commands.

    WARNING: This assumes a local branch. If you have shared the branch, do not run the rebase (because it modifies history). Run

    git merge master

    while you are on your other branch. This has less clean history, but can be used.

    The difference is:

    • Rebase – rewrites the branch ontop of master, replaying all the changes
    • Merge – a normal merge, creating a commit with two parents
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