With Git 2.13 (Q2 2017), you can disable (some of) the branch completion.
git checkout --no-guess ...
# or:
export GIT_COMPLETION_CHECKOUT_NO_GUESS=1
See commit 60e71bb (21 Apr 2017) by Jeff King (peff
).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster
-- in commit b439747, 01 May 2017)
As documented in contrib/completion/git-completion.bash
now:
You can set the following environment variables to influence the behavior of the completion routines:
GIT_COMPLETION_CHECKOUT_NO_GUESS
When set to "1", do not include "DWIM" suggestions in git-checkout
completion (e.g., completing "foo" when "origin/foo" exists).
Note: DWIM is short for Do What I Mean, where a system attempts to anticipate what users intend to do, correcting trivial errors automatically rather than blindly executing users' explicit but potentially incorrect inputs.
completion
: optionally disable checkout DWIM
When we complete branch names for "git checkout
", we also complete remote branch names that could trigger the DWIM behavior. Depending on your workflow and project, this can be either convenient or annoying.
For instance, my clone of gitster.git
contains 74 local "jk/*
" branches, but origin contains another 147.
When I want to checkout a local branch but can't quite remember the name, tab completion shows me 251 entries. And worse, for a topic that has been picked up for pu, the upstream branch name is likely to be similar to mine, leading to a high probability that I pick the wrong one and accidentally create a new branch.
Note: "picked up for pu": see a What's cooking in git.git
: it starts with:
Commits prefixed with '-
' are only in 'pu
' (proposed updates) while commits prefixed with '+
' are in 'next
'.
This is part of the Git Workflow Graduation process.
pu
(proposed updates) is an integration branch for things that are not quite ready for inclusion yet
This patch adds a way for the user to tell the completion
code not to include DWIM suggestions for checkout.
This can already be done by typing:
git checkout --no-guess jk/<TAB>
but that's rather cumbersome.
The downside, of course, is that you no longer get completion support when you do want to invoke the DWIM behavior.
But depending on your workflow, that may not be a big loss (for instance, in git.git I am much more likely to want to detach, so I'd type "git checkout origin/jk/<TAB>
" anyway).