On Fri, 30 Oct 2015 10:59:49 -0700 (PDT)
Ivan Švaljek wrote:
> Yes I would like to get the diff state in a C# program of mine, Git
> is one candidate if it's the easiest way to get such a state.
> Git is also a candidate because it has some merge functionality if
> I'm not wrong.
Well, you can l
Yes I would like to get the diff state in a C# program of mine, Git is one
candidate if it's the easiest way to get such a state.
Git is also a candidate because it has some merge functionality if I'm not
wrong.
Dana petak, 30. listopada 2015. u 14:44:49 UTC+1, korisnik Konstantin
Khomoutov nap
On Fri, 30 Oct 2015 05:06:00 -0700 (PDT)
Ivan Švaljek wrote:
> >> Is it possible to automate an C# app using git, so I get a flag
> >> whether the changes in the new file version are destructive or
> >> non-destructive? Bonus question: is there a functionality in git
> >> to then merge those two
>From Git’s perspective, both are “destructive”. You will see that the old
line is deleted and a new one is added. Also, if you simply check if
something was added to the code, your destructive example becomes
non-destructive, as the new version only adds “inline-” in the middle of
the line.
What
By destructive I mean any code overwrite or deletation, by non-destructive
I mean anything added to the source file that doesn't overwrite or delete
old version's content.
Destructive
.banner_wrap {display:block;} -> .banner_wrap {display:inline-block;}
Non-destructive
.banner_wrap {display:blo
First things first: what do you think destrictive? Removing "rm -rf \*"
from a shell script doesn’t seem destructive to me, for example…
2015-10-29 20:58 GMT+01:00 Ivan Švaljek :
> Is it possible to automate an C# app using git, so I get a flag whether
> the changes in the new file version are de