Trying to diff my local file with a GitHub repo before I submit a pull request so I can see what will show up, is there an accurate way of doing this? I assume
To compare a local working directory against a remote branch, for example origin/master:
git fetch origin mastergit fetch will not affect the files in your working directory; it does not try to merge changes like git pull does. git diff --summary FETCH_HEAD--stat instead of --summary. git diff FETCH_HEAD -- mydir/myfile.js--summary option and reference the file you want (or tree).As noted, origin references the remote repository and master references the branch within that repo. By default, git uses the name origin for a remote, so if you do git clone it will by default call that remote origin. Use git remote -v to see what origin points to.
You may have more than one remote. For example, if you "fork" a project on GitHub, you typically need a remote referencing the original project as well as your own fork. Say you create https://github.com/yourusername/someproject as a fork of https://github.com/theoriginal/someproject. By convention, you would name the remote to the original repo upstream, while your own fork would be origin. If you make changes to your fork on GitHub and want to fetch those changes locally, you would use git fetch origin master. If the upstream has made changes that you need to sync locally before making more changes, you would use git fetch upstream master.