# Cherry Pick A Range Of Commits Git's `cherry-pick` command allows you to specify a range of commits to be cherry picked onto the current branch. This can be done with the `A..B` style syntax -- where `A` is the older end of the range. Consider a scenario with the following chain of commits: `A - B - C - D`. ```bash $ git cherry-pick B..D ``` This will cherry pick commits `C` and `D` onto `HEAD`. This is because the lower-bound is exclusive. If you'd like to include `B` as well. Try the following: ```bash $ git cherry-pick B^..D ``` See `man git-cherry-pick` for more details.