Stefan Beller <sbel...@google.com> writes:

> On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 10:27 AM, Phil Susi <phills...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> I'm doing a rebase and got some conflicts.  I just want to take their
>> version of all files, but git checkout --theirs complains:
>>
>> --ours/--theirs' cannot be used with switching branches
>>
>> What gives?  I'm not *trying* to switch branches.  I just want to
>> resolve the conflict by taking their version.  If I try git checkout
>> --theirs ., then it complains that not every single file in the
>> directory has a "their" version.  So?  Take the ones that do.
>
> I think for checking out files you'd need to add the file names.
> In case of a collision between branch name and file name, even add
> a double dash:
>
>     git checkout --theirs -- file/name

That is true, but notice that the last example by Phil gives a dot
as the pathspec to match all available files.

Having said that,

    $ git checkout --theirs -- file/name

would fail when the path file/name is unmerged and does not have
stage #3 entry, wouldn't it?  So with ".", unless all paths that
match that pathspec (i.e. all available files) are either merged
(i.e. without conflict) or have stage #3 entry, it is expected that
the command would fail consistently to the case where a pathspec
"file/name" that happens to match only one path is given, and that
is the behaviour Phil saw, I would think.

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