Have you ever gone on a long holiday and wanted to check the updates your team have made since 2 weeks ago? Or maybe even in just the last week. Sure, you could trawl through PRs, but there may be an easier solution. Git has built in functionality to check just this.
If you want to view the last 2 weeks of changes, you can use git log
. For example, to view the last two weeks of changes your repository, run the following in terminal:
git log --since='2 weeks ago'
Similarly, if you only wanted to view one week of changes, you'd write:
git log --since='2 weeks ago'
The date for the --since
variable can be given like 2 weeks ago
, 1 year ago
, 2 months ago
, or 5 days ago
- so you have a lot of flexibility as to how you want to show the changes. You can also use ISO timestamps, such as 2022-03-03T14:32:12-01:00
Note: you can also use git whatchanged
, which does exactly the same thing as git log
, but is kept around for historical reasons. The only difference between git whatchanged
and git log
is that git whatchanged
shows all files in a change by default.
It is recommended to use git log
instead, as it's still possible to show all files using this command too, by typing git log --since='2 weeks ago' --stat
Other git log options
As well as being able to give you a simple interface to view changes, there are some useful features git log
has which can add more information to the log you receive. Here are some of my favourites:
-
--max-count
or-n
- limits the maximum count of git commits - can be used likegit log --since='2 weeks ago' --max-count=5
-
--author
or--committer
- shows commits by a specific author, i.e.git log --since='2 weeks ago' --author="joe"
-
--merges
or--no-merges
- either shows only merges, or hides all merges. -
--grep
- limits the log by log item, sogit log --since='2 weeks ago' --grep="feat-ui"
will only show changes with 'feat-ui'. -
--stat
- lists all the files made in a particular change. -
-p
- which shows file by file changes.
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