In HEAD (the latest commit), I have a file named foo. In my current working tree, I renamed it to bar, and also edited it.
I want to git diff foo in HEAD, and bar in my current working tree.
You can compare files between two Git commits by specifying the name of the ref that refers to the commits you want to compare. A ref may be a commit ID or HEAD, which refers to the current branch. Let's compare two commits in our Git repository. The above command will perform a diff operation across our two commits.
Specify the paths explicitly:
git diff HEAD:full/path/to/foo full/path/to/bar
Check out the --find-renames option in the git-diff docs.
Credit: twaggs.
I believe using --no-index is what you're looking for:
git diff [<options>] --no-index [--] <path> <path> as mentioned in the git manual:
This form is to compare the given two paths on the filesystem. You can omit the
--no-indexoption when running the command in a working tree controlled by Git and at least one of the paths points outside the working tree, or when running the command outside a working tree controlled by Git.
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