Branch with No Ancestors
You want the --orphan flag. For example:
git checkout master
git checkout --orphan foo
# Unstage all the files in your working tree.
git rm --cached $(git ls-files)
will create a new branch named foo with no ancestors, but it will preserve the current working tree from whatever branch you were on when you called the command (in this case, the master branch). You can then modify your working tree to suit, and then make a commit to start that branch's history afresh.
Incremental Staging of Files
To perform incremental additions to your history, use git add
to stage just the files you want for each commit. The git-add(1) manual page has this to say about adding files selectively:
Fileglobs (e.g. *.c) can be given to add all matching files. Also a leading directory name (e.g. dir to add dir/file1 and dir/file2) can be given to add all files in the
directory, recursively.
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