Branko Čibej wrote on Mon, Jul 01, 2013 at 19:41:10 +0200:
> On 01.07.2013 19:36, Daniel Shahaf wrote:
> > Thinking about the behaviour of 'svn blame -r 50:20 file@50':
> >
> > Right now, if I'm not mistaken, it wants 'file@5 -r 20' to exist.  Johan
> > suggested it should automatically round 20 up to the oldest revision in
> > which the file existed, to enable, for example, 'svn blame -r 50:0' by
> > analogy to 'svn log -r 0:50'.
> >
> > But what if the file existed in revision 10, got deleted in revision 11,
> > and resurrected (by 'svn cp file@10 file && svn ci') in r30?  What
> > should the end of the blame chain be --- file@r30, file@r20, or file@r10?
> 
> I'd expect that to depend on whatever happens to be the peg revision in
> the blame incantation. I can never remember what the default is in any
> particular case.

The invocation is 'svn blame -r 40:20 file@50'.  The file was created as
^/iota@r10, delted in r11, resurrected as ^/iota in r30, and not
added/copied/deleted/removed otherwise.  (It might have had text and/or
prop mods at various revisions.)  What is the output?

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