Björn Steinbrink <[email protected]> writes:
> On 2010.04.22 22:37:05 +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
>> Is there a risk? You do get an editor with all the files affected listed
>> giving you a big fat warning what you are about to commit.
>
> And if I happen to have two unrelated changes in a single file that's
> worth nothing at all. For example, I might have changed the condition
> that causes some message to be shown, and discovered a typo in the
> message itself and fixed it along the way. That needs two commits, but
> the list of modified files doesn't tell that.
>
> Only "commit -v" would help there, showing the diff in the editor. But
> reviewing the diff in the editor is a PITA and I lose the whole review
> progress if I find something I don't want to commit and have to abort.
> Using "git add [-i|-p|-e]", git helps me to keep track of the changes I
> already reviewed and decided to commit.
>
> Björn
Then you would keep doing that or use git commit --interactive. The
suggested change would not affect you at all either way.
MfG
Goswin
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