From 33405be34bcb72d8fe69463c80c542eacb19b7ef Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jonathan Nieder Date: Fri, 9 Oct 2009 18:07:39 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Documentation: clone: clarify discussion of initial branch When saying the initial branch is equal to the currently active remote branch, it is probably intended that the branch heads point to the same commit. Maybe it would be more useful to a new user to emphasize that the tree contents and history are the same. More important, probably, is that this new branch is set up so that "git pull" merges changes from the corresponding remote branch. The next paragraph addresses that directly. What the reader needs to know to begin with is that (1) the initial branch is your own; if you do not pull, it won't get updated, and that (2) the initial branch starts out at the same commit as the upstream. Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano --- Documentation/git-clone.txt | 5 +++-- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/git-clone.txt b/Documentation/git-clone.txt index aacf4fd327..5ebcba1c7c 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-clone.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-clone.txt @@ -19,8 +19,9 @@ DESCRIPTION Clones a repository into a newly created directory, creates remote-tracking branches for each branch in the cloned repository -(visible using `git branch -r`), and creates and checks out an initial -branch equal to the cloned repository's currently active branch. +(visible using `git branch -r`), and creates and checks out an +initial branch that is forked from the cloned repository's +currently active branch. After the clone, a plain `git fetch` without arguments will update all the remote-tracking branches, and a `git pull` without