Stefan Beller <stefanbel...@gmail.com> writes:

> From: Stefan Beller <sbel...@google.com>
>
> ---

"X can do Y" can be taken as a statement of fact (to which "so
what?"  is an appropriate response), a desire (to which "then please
say 'make X do Y' instead" is an appropriate response), or a report
of a bug (to which "please explain why X should be forbidden from
doing Y" is an appropriate response).

This is way under-explained.  I think this is "make X do Y" kind,
and if so, please say so and possibly why it is a good idea to teach
X how to do Y.

Thanks.



>  diff.c | 6 ++++--
>  1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/diff.c b/diff.c
> index 87b1bb2..2aefd0f 100644
> --- a/diff.c
> +++ b/diff.c
> @@ -473,11 +473,13 @@ static void emit_line_0(struct diff_options *o, const 
> char *set, const char *res
>       }
>  
>       if (len || !nofirst) {
> -             fputs(set, file);
> +             if (set)
> +                     fputs(set, file);
>               if (!nofirst)
>                       fputc(first, file);
>               fwrite(line, len, 1, file);
> -             fputs(reset, file);
> +             if (reset)
> +                     fputs(reset, file);
>       }
>       if (has_trailing_carriage_return)
>               fputc('\r', file);

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