Jeff King <p...@peff.net> writes:

> Although there are interesting cases around inversion. For example:
>
>   git grep --not \( --not -e a --and --not -e b \)
>
> is equivalent to:
>
>   git grep -e a --or -e b
>
> Do people care if we actually hunt down the exact column where we
> _didn't_ match "b" in the first case?  The two are equivalent, but I
> have to wonder if somebody writing the first one really cares.

I may be misunderstanding the question, but I personally would feel
that "git grep --not <ANYTHING>" is OK to say "the entire line is at
fault that it did not satisify the criteria to match <ANYTHING>".
I.e., I'd be happy if --column marked the first column as the
beginning of the match, or --color painted the entire line in the
output of the former.


Reply via email to