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Add Using Commands With A Relative Date Format as a git til

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jbranchaud
2019-12-16 20:26:47 -06:00
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commit 50e1151b68
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For a steady stream of TILs, [sign up for my newsletter](https://tinyletter.com/jbranchaud).
_890 TILs and counting..._
_891 TILs and counting..._
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- [Untrack A Directory Of Files Without Deleting](git/untrack-a-directory-of-files-without-deleting.md)
- [Untrack A File Without Deleting It](git/untrack-a-file-without-deleting-it.md)
- [Update The URL Of A Remote](git/update-the-url-of-a-remote.md)
- [Using Commands With A Relative Date Format](git/using-commands-with-a-relative-date-format.md)
- [Verbose Commit Message](git/verbose-commit-message.md)
- [Viewing A File On Another Branch](git/viewing-a-file-on-another-branch.md)
- [What Changed?](git/what-changed.md)

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# Using Commands With A Relative Date Format
If you want to know what changed on a branch _since_ last week, you can more or
less ask just like that:
```bash
$ git log --since="1 week ago"
```
Or, what has happened since yesterday:
```bash
$ git log --after="yesterday"
```
The `--since`/`--after` flags, and their counterparts `--until`/`--before`,
accept a variety of date formats including _relative dates_.
Relative dates can be used with other commands and even as a ref modifier. For
instance, this is a way of comparing `develop` from a week ago with `develop`
from two weeks ago:
```bash
$ git diff develop@{"1 week ago"} develop@{"2 weeks ago"}
```
[source](https://alexpeattie.com/blog/working-with-dates-in-git)