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Il 17/12/2012 20:42, Junio C Hamano ha scritto:
[...]
I am not sure how you would handle the last parameter to git mv,
though. That is by definition a path that does not exist,
i.e. cannot be completed.
Right, the code should be changed.
No
Manlio Perillo manlio.peri...@gmail.com writes:
git mv COPYING README X
Assuming X is a new untracked directory, do you think it is an usability
problem if an user try to do:
git mv COPYING README TAB
and X does not appear in the completion list?
It is hard to say. Will it
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Il 19/12/2012 23:49, Junio C Hamano ha scritto:
Manlio Perillo manlio.peri...@gmail.com writes:
git mv COPYING README X
Assuming X is a new untracked directory, do you think it is an usability
problem if an user try to do:
git mv
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Il 17/12/2012 20:42, Junio C Hamano ha scritto:
[...]
I am not sure how you would handle the last parameter to git mv,
though. That is by definition a path that does not exist,
i.e. cannot be completed.
Right, the code should be changed.
No
Manlio Perillo manlio.peri...@gmail.com writes:
As long as all of the above stops completion at directory boundary,
I think the above sounds like a sensible thing to do. e.g. when
ls-files gives Documentation/Makefile and Documentation/git.txt,
git cmd DocTAB first would give git cmd
The git-completion.bash script did not implemented full support for
completion, for git commands that operate on files from the current
working directory or the index.
For these commands, only options completion was available.
Full support for completion is now implemented, for git commands
Manlio Perillo manlio.peri...@gmail.com writes:
The git-completion.bash script did not implemented full support for
completion, for git commands that operate on files from the current
working directory or the index.
For these commands, only options completion was available.
Hrm, git mv
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