Siddharth Kannan <kannan.siddhart...@gmail.com> writes:

>  sha1_name.c              |  5 ++++
>  t/t4214-log-shorthand.sh | 73 
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  2 files changed, 78 insertions(+)
>  create mode 100755 t/t4214-log-shorthand.sh
>
> diff --git a/sha1_name.c b/sha1_name.c
> index 73a915f..d774e46 100644
> --- a/sha1_name.c
> +++ b/sha1_name.c
> @@ -947,6 +947,11 @@ static int get_sha1_1(const char *name, int len, 
> unsigned char *sha1, unsigned l
>       if (!ret)
>               return 0;
>  
> +     if (!strcmp(name, "-")) {
> +             name = "@{-1}";
> +             len = 5;
> +     }

One drawback of this approach is that further error messages will be
given from the "@{-1}" string that the user never typed.

After you do that, the existing "turn - into @{-1}" pieces of code
become useless and you should remove it (probably in a further patch).

There are at least:

$ git grep -n -A1 'strcmp.*"-"' | grep -B 1 '@\{1\}'
builtin/checkout.c:975: if (!strcmp(arg, "-"))
builtin/checkout.c-976-         arg = "@{-1}";
--
builtin/merge.c:1231:   } else if (argc == 1 && !strcmp(argv[0], "-")) {
builtin/merge.c-1232-           argv[0] = "@{-1}";
--
builtin/revert.c:158:           if (!strcmp(argv[1], "-"))
builtin/revert.c-159-                   argv[1] = "@{-1}";
--
builtin/worktree.c:344: if (!strcmp(branch, "-"))
builtin/worktree.c-345-         branch = "@{-1}";

In the final version, obviously the same "refactoring" (specific
command -> git-wide) should be done for documentation (it should be in
this patch to avoid letting not-up-to-date documentation even for a
single commit).

> diff --git a/t/t4214-log-shorthand.sh b/t/t4214-log-shorthand.sh
> new file mode 100755
> index 0000000..dec966c
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/t/t4214-log-shorthand.sh
> @@ -0,0 +1,73 @@
> +#!/bin/sh
> +
> +test_description='log can show previous branch using shorthand - for @{-1}'
> +
> +. ./test-lib.sh
> +
> +test_expect_success 'setup' '
> +     echo hello >world &&
> +     git add world &&
> +     git commit -m initial &&
> +     echo "hello second time" >>world &&
> +     git add world &&
> +     git commit -m second &&
> +     echo "hello other file" >>planet &&
> +     git add planet &&
> +     git commit -m third &&
> +     echo "hello yet another file" >>city &&
> +     git add city &&
> +     git commit -m fourth
> +'

You may use test_commit to save a few lines of code.

> +test_expect_success '"log -" should work' '
> +     git checkout -b testing-1 master^ &&
> +     git checkout -b testing-2 master~2 &&
> +     git checkout master &&
> +
> +     git log testing-2 >expect &&
> +     git log - >actual &&
> +     test_cmp expect actual
> +'

I'd have split this into a "setup branches" and a '"log -" should work'
test (to actually see where "setup branches" happen in the output, and
to allow running the setup step separately if needed). Not terribly
important.

> +test_expect_success 'symmetric revision range should work when one end is 
> left empty' '
> +     git checkout testing-2 &&
> +     git checkout master &&
> +     git log ...@{-1} > expect.first_empty &&
> +     git log @{-1}... > expect.last_empty &&
> +     git log ...- > actual.first_empty &&
> +     git log -... > actual.last_empty &&

Nitpick: we stick the > and the filename (as you did in most places
already).

It may be worth adding tests for more cases like

* Check what happens with suffixes, i.e. -^, -@{yesterday} and -~.

* -..- -> to make sure you handle the presence of two - properly.

* multiple separate arguments to make sure you handle them all, e.g.
  "git log - -", "git log HEAD -", "git log - HEAD".

The last two may be overkill, but the first one is probably important.

-- 
Matthieu Moy
http://www-verimag.imag.fr/~moy/

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