I would use git restore (available since Git 2.23):
git restore --source otherbranch path/to/myfile.txt
Why is this better than other options?
- by default
git restore modifies files only in the working directory
git checkout otherbranch -- path/to/myfile.txt copies the file to the working directory (your files on disk) but also to the staging area. It has the same effect as if you copied the file manually and executed git add on it. git restore by default changes only the working directory.
To get the same result as for git checkout otherbranch -- path/to/myfile.txt you can write git restore --source otherbranch --staged --worktree path/to/myfile.txt
- by default
git restore deletes files from the working directory when they are absent in the other branch
git restore can be used to restore the whole folder with git restore --source otherbranch path/to/dir. You can do a similar operation with git checkout but git restore by default will delete files that are absent in otherbranch. To get git checkout behaviour use --overlay option.
For example, if there are fewer files on otherbranch than in the current working directory (and these files are tracked) without --overlay option git restore will delete them. But this is a good default behaviour because you most likely want the state of the directory to be "the same as otherbranch", not "the same as otherbranch but with additional files from my current branch".
To get the same result as for git checkout otherbranch -- path/to/dir you can write git restore --source otherbranch --staged --worktree --overlay path/to/dir
git restore doesn't use shell redirection to create file (Powershell only problem)
git show otherbranch:path/to/myfile.txt > path/to/myfile.txt uses standard shell redirection. If you use PowerShell then there might be problem with text encoding or could result in a corrupt file if it's binary. With git restore changing files is done all by the git executable.