How to revert to origin's master branch's version of file

Assuming you did not commit the file, or add it to the index, then:

git checkout -- filename

Assuming you added it to the index, but did not commit it, then:

git reset HEAD filename
git checkout -- filename

Assuming you did commit it, then:

git checkout origin/master filename

Assuming you want to blow away all commits from your branch (VERY DESTRUCTIVE):

git reset --hard origin/master

I've faced same problem and came across to this thread but my problem was with upstream. Below git command worked for me.

Syntax

git checkout {remoteName}/{branch} -- {../path/file.js}

Example

git checkout upstream/develop -- public/js/index.js

If you didn't commit it to the master branch yet, its easy:

  • get off the master branch (like git checkout -b oops/fluke/dang)
  • commit your changes there (like git add -u; git commit;)
  • go back the master branch (like git checkout master)

Your changes will be saved in branch oops/fluke/dang; master will be as it was.

Tags:

Git