# Override Your Project Mise File A project I'm working on has a version-controlled `.mise.toml` file in it. Some changes were made to that recently that introduce some env vars that conflict with my setup. If I make edits to that file, then I have a modified version of `.mise.toml` sitting in my Git working copy. ``` # .mise.toml [env] CONFIG_SETTING = "project" ``` Instead, I can rely on the loading precedence rules of `mise` to override those project settings with my individual settings. I can do that with the `.mise.local.toml` file which is played on top of any `mise` configuration from files further down the precedence chain. ``` # .mise.local.toml [env] CONFIG_SETTING = "override" ``` Assuming I have `mise` setup with my shell environment to automatically load in these files, I can now check what takes precedence: ```bash $ echo $CONFIG_SETTING override ``` Make sure `.mise.local.toml` is included in the `.gitignore` file to avoid checking in your personal environment overrides. To be sure about what files are loaded and in what order, give `mise cfg` a try. I discuss that in more detail in [List The Files Being Loaded By Mise](list-the-files-being-loaded-by-mise.md).