Matthew Flatt <mflatt-sDh8Nw2yj/+vc3sceru...@public.gmane.org> writes:
> At Tue, 25 May 2010 19:33:31 -0400, David Van Horn wrote: >> How do I generate a patch from changes to my local git branch of the >> racket sources? If I just use git diff -p I don't see any of the files >> I added; only the changes to the existing files. For the files I added, >> I did a git add and git commit, but I still don't see the contents in >> git diff. > > It's easiest to use > > git format-patch <since-SHA1> > > Without any arguments, `git diff' tells you about added but > not-yet-committed changes. No, `git diff' tells you about the changes that were not even added, i.e. changes in the work tree (as opposed to the index/staging area). If you want to see the added (i.e. to-be-committed, in the index) changes, you have to use `git diff --cached'. Štěpán _________________________________________________ For list-related administrative tasks: http://list.cs.brown.edu/mailman/listinfo/plt-dev