Question

I just upgraded Git. I'm on Git version 1.8.3.

This morning I tried to unstash a change 1 deep in the stack.

I ran git stash pop stash@{1} and got this error.

fatal: ambiguous argument 'stash@1': unknown revision or path not in the working tree. Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this: 'git [...] -- [...]'

I've tried about 20+ variations on this as well as using apply instead of pop with no success. What's changed? Anyone else encounter this?

Was it helpful?

Solution

git stash apply n

works as of git version 2.11

Original answer, possibly helping to debug issues with the older syntax involving shell escapes:

As pointed out previously, the curly braces may require escaping or quoting depending on your OS, shell, etc.

See "stash@{1} is ambiguous?" for some detailed hints of what may be going wrong, and how to work around it in various shells and platforms.

git stash list
git stash apply stash@{n}

git stash apply version

OTHER TIPS

You need to escape the braces:

git stash pop stash@\{1\}

If you want to be sure to not have to deal with quotes for the syntax stash@{x}, use Git 2.11 (Q4 2016)

See commit a56c8f5 (24 Oct 2016) by Aaron M Watson (watsona4).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster -- in commit 9fa1f90, 31 Oct 2016)

stash: allow stashes to be referenced by index only

Instead of referencing "stash@{n}" explicitly, make it possible to simply reference as "n".
Most users only reference stashes by their position in the stash stack (what I refer to as the "index" here).

The syntax for the typical stash (stash@{n}) is slightly annoying and easy to forget, and sometimes difficult to escape properly in a script.

Because of this the capability to do things with the stash by simply referencing the index is desirable.

So:

git stash drop 1
git stash pop 1
git stash apply 1
git stash show 1

On Windows Powershell I run this:

git stash apply "stash@{1}"

As Robert pointed out, quotation marks might do the trick for you:

git stash pop stash@"{1}"

If none of the above work, quotation marks around the stash itself might work for you:

git stash pop "stash@{0}"

Version 2.11+ use the following:

git stash list

git stash apply n

n is the number stash@{12}

I have 2.22 installed and this worked..

git stash pop --index 1

First check the list:-

git stash list

copy the index you wanted to pop from the stash list

git stash pop stash@{index_number}

eg.:

git stash pop stash@{1}

I've seen this answer a few times in this list, but just to be explicitly clear, at least as of git version 2.33.0, git stash pop stash@{n} is valid. No escaping necessary.

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