On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 06:33:11AM +0000, Damien Robert wrote: > git init > git commit --allow-empty -m "init" > git checkout -b test > echo foo > foo > git add foo > git commit -am 'add foo' > git checkout master > echo 'Important data' > foo #[1] > echo foo > .gitignore > git checkout test > > If I tried a `git checkout test` after [1], I would get the error message > error: The following untracked working tree files would be overwritten by checkout: foo > But after adding foo to .gitignore, I am able to checkout to branch test > without warning. Of course this overwrites foo to the version in test. This is by design. Marking a file in .gitignore tells git that the content is not precious and can be removed if need be. For most ignored files, this is what you want (e.g., you mark "*.o" as ignored because it is generated; you do not want to add it, and you can always make it again). The less common case is a file that is precious and needs to live inside your repository directory, but which you do not want to add (e.g., a config file that affects your project, but should not ever be committed). People have occasionally asked for a .gitignore-like mechanism to mark such files as "precious but do not add". However, nobody has actually implemented anything. -Peff -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html