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Home/ Questions/Q 8596847
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Editorial Team
  • 0
Editorial Team
Asked: June 12, 20262026-06-12T00:46:41+00:00 2026-06-12T00:46:41+00:00

Let’s say I have a project that I have worked on for a while,

  • 0

Let’s say I have a project that I have worked on for a while,
then I would like to start over with a subset of the files and keep the history of those files.

So is there a way that I can manually merge one file onto the new empty branch?
Or do I need to merge over all the files and then remove the ones I don’t want any more?

I was trying this workflow (but it don’t really work)

$> git init 
$> vi file1.c
$> git add file1.c
$> git commit -m 'first commit'
$> vi file2.c
$> git add file2.c
$> git commit -m 'added file2'
$> git log 
commit 3788d18e62812d43f6b745f66fdab77081d79711
commit 3ab6959385c09fe2e254104a319a553ee58b198a

$> git checkout @{0}
Note: checking out '3ab6959385c09fe2e254104a319a553ee58b198a'.

You are in 'detached HEAD' state. You can look around, make experimental
changes and commit them, and you can discard any commits you make in this
state without impacting any branches by performing another checkout.

If you want to create a new branch to retain commits you create, you may
do so (now or later) by using -b with the checkout command again. Example:

  git checkout -b new_branch_name

HEAD is now at 3ab6959... first commit
$> git branch -a
* (no branch)
  master

$> git branch new_branch
$> git branch 
* (no branch)
  master
  new_branch

$> git checkout new_branch 
Switched to branch 'new_branch'

$> git mergetool master file1.c
merge tool candidates: opendiff kdiff3 tkdiff xxdiff meld tortoisemerge gvimdiff diffuse ecmerge p4merge araxis emerge vimdiff

master: file not found
Continue merging other unresolved paths (y/n) ? n

Why do I get “master: file not found”?

How should that merge look like?

Or how do I merge a specific file at a specific commit over to the new branch?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-12T00:46:43+00:00Added an answer on June 12, 2026 at 12:46 am

    There is a way that kind of does this

    $> git checkout new_branch
    $> git merge old_branch
    $> git rm -rf *
    $> git commit -m 'new try'
    $> git checkout old_branch file1.c
    $> git commit -a -m 'Fetch file1'
    

    Then we have only file1 and kept file1:s history.

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