Stefan Beller <sbel...@google.com> writes:

> Here is what currently happens:
>
>>
>>          context
>>         -B              dim  oldMoved
>>         -B              dim  oldMoved
>>         -B              highlight oldMovedAlternative
>>         -A              highlight oldMovedAlternative
>>         -A              dim  oldMoved
>>         -A              dim  oldMoved
>>          context
>>         +A              dim  newMoved
>>         +A              dim  newMoved
>>         +A              highlight  newMovedAlternative
>>         +B              highlight  newMovedAlternative
>>         +B              dim  newMoved
>>         +B              dim  newMoved
>>          context
>>
>
> So the there is only one "highlight" color in each block.
> There is no separate hightligh-for-ending-block and
> highlight-for-new-block respectively.

I think the adjacentbounds mode is simply broken if that is the
design.

In the above simplified case, you can get away with only a single
"highlight" color, but you cannot tell where the boundaries are when
three or more lines are shuffled, no?

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