Great, this is awesome explanation - thank you!

On Tuesday, 28 June 2016 13:29:10 UTC+2, Konstantin Khomoutov wrote:
>
> On Tue, 28 Jun 2016 04:17:21 -0700 (PDT) 
> Michał Urban <motivapr...@gmail.com <javascript:>> wrote: 
>
> > Hi, I would like to ask what is depicted in git pull output: 
> > 
> > e.g. 
> > 
> > file1 | 4+- 
> > file2 | 272 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 
> > file3 | 184 +++++++++++++ 
> > file4 | 11 +- 
> > 
> > etc. 
>
> Git pull performs merging after fetching the data. 
> Merging usually changes the state of the project. 
> This output, for each file, shows the number of lines changed as the 
> result of the merge, and a simple histogram depicting the amount of 
> added lines ('+') compared to the amount of removed lines ('-'); 
> the larger the set of changes applied to a file, the longer its "bar" 
> in the histogram. 
>
> In your case, lines were only added to files "file2" and "file3", 
> and files "file1" and "file4" got roughly the same number of lines 
> added and removed. 
>
> IOW, this histogram allows a human operator to have a quick 
> coarse-grained overview of what happened to the project due to the 
> merge. 
>

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