Yes, I had seen that thread, but I explained I don't want the same thing as what you're asking for. I do not want to refresh them all in one command. I want to selectively refresh some of them, but in an easier fashion than having to type Get for each of them.
On 28 March 2015 at 08:19, Aram Santogidis <gnubun...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > I posted a similar question in the list few days back > http://marc.info/?l=9fans&m=142721596630272&w=1 > > and one solution that was suggested by Antons and works fine for me is the > following. > > Edit X:^... [^+].*[^\/]$: e > > Cheers, > Aram > > On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 11:05 PM, Bakul Shah <ba...@bitblocks.com> wrote: >> >> >> On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 18:49:51 -0000 Paul Lalonde <paul.a.lalo...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> > The feature direction I'd like when working with Git is for the window >> > of a >> > git-changed file to become un-editable. This would require adding the >> > idea >> > of a un-editable window, which is probably a bad idea. >> >> Not sure what you mean. If you git {pull,checkout,merge,...}, >> files you have been editing (but not yet saved) may already >> require merging. You may be better off using some client side >> git hook that checks the state of acme edited files and tries >> to do the right thing (not that I have ever used these hooks). >> >> > Meanwhile I use the script below to generate X commands to reload >> > changed >> > windows. If I had a little more gumption (and less fear) I'd pipe the >> > last >> > output to make acme execute the Edits. >> > >> > #!/bin/bash >> > cd `git rev-parse --git-dir`/.. >> > git diff --name-only HEAD~ | sed s+^+`pwd`/+ | sort > /tmp/foobar >> > 9p read acme/index | awk '{print $6}' | sort | comm -12 - /tmp/foobar | >> > sed 's+\(.*\)+Edit X=\1=,r+' >> >> Nice! >> >