this post was submitted on 22 Sep 2023
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If your local branch and the branch on GitHub diverge, they need to be merged. If you pull using the console it will tell you that, apparently VScode does this automatically?
Anyways, nothing to be concerned about. If you're annoyed by the merge commits, you can configure git to "rebase on pull", google it, you'll find instructions pretty quickly.
To expand on this a bit,
git pull
under the hood is basically a shortcut forgit fetch
(get the remote repository's state) andgit merge origin/main main
(merge to remote changes to your local branch, which for you is always main).When you have no local changes, this process just "makes a line" in your commit history (see
git log --graph --decorate
), but when you have local changes and the remote has changed too, it has to put those together into a merge commit - think a diamond shape with the common ancestor at the bottom, the remote changes on one side, your changes on the other side, and the merge of the two at the top.Like the above comment says, normally this process is clarified at the command line - VSCode must be handling it automatically if there are no code conflicts.