Jeff King <[email protected]> writes:
> On Tue, Apr 12, 2016 at 05:33:33PM +0200, Michael J Gruber wrote:
>
>> $ git show cab2cdadfda8e8e8631026443b11d3ed6e7ba517:
>> tree cab2cdadfda8e8e8631026443b11d3ed6e7ba517:
>>
>> .gitattributes
>> .gitignore
>> .mailmap
>> ...
>
> As Junio pointed out, the colon here is not syntactic, but from the
> original object name you gave it. But here...
>
>> $ git show 04050d37b1676ba8da277be1902513049b45413a:
>> tree 04050d37b1676ba8da277be1902513049b45413a
>>
>> .gitattributes
>> .gitignore
>> .mailmap
>> ...
>
> ...it is missing. Did you mean to omit it from the command-line?
I suspect that is cut-and-paste something. I see:
$ git show 04050d37b1676ba8da277be1902513049b45413a: | head -n1
tree 04050d37b1676ba8da277be1902513049b45413a:
$ git show 04050d37b1676ba8da277be1902513049b45413a | head -n1
tree 04050d37b1676ba8da277be1902513049b45413a
which is expected.
It indeed becomes confusing when you give "<treeish>:" from the
command line, as it looks as if there is conceptually a list of tree
contents that is shown like so:
tree tree1:
contents of tree1
tree tree2:
contents of tree2
...
and we are showing only the first one. If the original input were
given as "<treeish>^{tree}", there is no confusion.
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