As a part of "funny pathname character" updates, I was reviewing "apply.c" and have two questions on its "--show-files" flag. * Unlike other informational flags like --stat and --summary, it does not turn off "apply". Is it intentional? * Do you (or anybody else) use it, and if so how? The current code in the proposed updates branch decodes the same C-style encoded pathnames GNU patch with proposed enhancements would understand before applying patches, and when it needs to show pathnames with --index-info, --stat, and --summary, it uses the same encoded pathname to keep things on one line. I think --show-files should also do the same for consistency, but before I update it I wanted to ask the above questions. If nobody uses it, I can just ignore the issues and probably remove the flag. The plan is to backport the git-apply change to the maint branch to do a 0.99.8e before updated git-diff-* hits the master branch. The only thing that would make a difference is embedded SP. Currently they are not quoted, but they will be, like this: : siamese; git diff diff --git "a/Read Me" "b/Read Me" index 3deac99..543a8f0 100644 --- "a/Read Me" +++ "b/Read Me" ... - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.htmlReceived on Mon Oct 17 04:42:25 2005
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