Sometimes when trying to resolve a merge, you may want to keep one file instead of the other. You don’t need to open up the files and fix the potentially hundreds of conflicts, you just want to choose the one you want and be done with it. Sadly, this isn’t exactly clear in older versions of Git, but more recent ones have made it easier. Big thanks to Kevin Old for his post on the subject which reminded me about this issue.

So, the scenario is: you’re in the middle of a merge, and you want to keep one file or the other.

$ git merge master Auto-merged _layouts/default.html CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in _layouts/default.html Auto-merged index.html CONFLICT (content): Merge conflict in index.html Automatic merge failed; fix conflicts and then commit the result.

There’s two unmerged files here. According to the git checkout manpage, there’s a --theirs and --ours options on the command. The former will keep the version of the file that you merged in, and the other will keep the original one we had.

The following commands will keep the original file for index.html, and then use the merged in file only for _layouts/default.html.

git checkout --ours index.html git checkout --theirs _layouts/default.html

Sadly, these options are only in Git versions 1.6.1 and up. If you have an older version and don’t feel like upgrading, there’s ways to get around this. To emulate --theirs , we’d do:

git reset -- _layouts/default.html git checkout MERGE_HEAD -- _layouts/default.html

And for --ours :

git reset -- index.html git checkout ORIG_HEAD -- index.html