On Fri, 29 Jul 2005, Paul Mackerras wrote: > > I have reworked the way gitk displays merges.
Ok, goodie. It works fine in my environment, with most merges showing up as not interesting. But a merge like 3e0777b8fa96f7073ed5d13d3bc1d573b766bef9 shows an example of where there was actually both real content merges, and some real clashes. However, most of the content merges were trivial, and they often hide the real clashes. For example, if you click on that merge, a _lot_ of it looks like it might be clashes, even though most of it was auto-merged. This is not really a problem, but I get the feeling that it could be improved somehow - maybe a button that hides the parts that don't have clashes? > In the usual case of two parents, lines from the first parent are in red > and lines from the second parent are in blue. Lines in the result that > don't correspond to either parent are in bold black. To get the alternate output, maybe something like: - run "merge" on the original/parent1/parent2 (the same way the git-merge-one-file-script does) - anything that merged fine is in black (regardless of which parent it came from), and then mark the merge rejects are in red/blue depending on parent? I don't know how doable that would be. Linus - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html