On Fri, Aug 17, 2018 at 04:33:30PM +0200, Duy Nguyen wrote:

> On Fri, Aug 17, 2018 at 8:47 AM Jonathan Nieder <jrnie...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy wrote:
> >
> > > --- a/builtin/commit.c
> > > +++ b/builtin/commit.c
> > > @@ -1489,7 +1489,7 @@ int cmd_commit(int argc, const char **argv, const 
> > > char *prefix)
> > >                           STATUS_FORMAT_LONG),
> > >               OPT_BOOL('z', "null", &s.null_termination,
> > >                        N_("terminate entries with NUL")),
> > > -             OPT_BOOL(0, "amend", &amend, N_("amend previous commit")),
> > > +             OPT_BOOL('j', "amend", &amend, N_("amend previous commit")),
> > [...]
> > > Thoughts?
> >
> > I'm not a fan.  I would have trouble remembering what the short option
> > name means, and it matches the common --jobs option for parallelism
> > that many commands use.  "git commit --am" works today already and
> > doesn't run into those problems.
> 
> The alternative is -A or -M which may be easier associated with
> --amend. That "--am" also would break the moment somebody adds
> --amsomething.

I think "-A" has been considered as possibility for matching "commit -a"
/ "add -A" in the past, but I had trouble finding past discussion
(searching for "A" in the mailing list is not very productive). It was
mentioned in 3ba1f11426 (git-add --all: add all files, 2008-07-19), but
that was quite a while ago.

Not necessarily a blocker, but something to consider.

Like Jonathan, I do find "-j" a little non-intuitive, but I agree that
most of the intuitive ones are taken. :)

-Peff

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