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Home/ Questions/Q 7760817
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T13:59:23+00:00 2026-06-01T13:59:23+00:00

This often happens to me: I’m working on a couple related changes at the

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This often happens to me:

I’m working on a couple related changes at the same time over the course of a day or two, and when it’s time to commit, I end up forgetting what changed in a specific file. (This is just a personal git repo, so I’m ok with having more than one update in a commit.)

Is there any way to preview the changes between my local file, which is about to be checked in, and the last commit for that file?

Something like:

git diff --changed /myfile.txt

And it would print out something like:

line 23
  (last commit): var = 2+2
  (current):     var = myfunction() + 2

line 149
  (last commit): return var
  (current):     return var / 7

This way, I could quickly see what I had done in that file since it was last checked in.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T13:59:25+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 1:59 pm

    If you want to see what you haven’t git added yet:

    git diff myfile.txt
    

    or if you want to see already added changes

    git diff --cached myfile.txt
    
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