Am Fr., 7. Dez. 2018 um 13:45 Uhr schrieb Eric Sunshine
:
>
> On Fri, Dec 7, 2018 at 7:36 AM Victor Toni wrote:
> > I'm wondering if there is any way to show which rules (ideally with
> > the .gitignore file they are coming from) are causing a specific file
> > to
In a rather complex setup with deep directory structure it happens
every now and then, that files get ignored when trying to add them.
As these files are _not_ shown in `git status` but in `git status
--ignored` so I guess the culprit is some misconfigured `.gitignore`.
Trying to ad the specific f
2017-07-20 22:30 GMT+02:00 Junio C Hamano :
>
> I've read the function again and I think the attached patch covers
> everything that ought to be a filename.
>
Your swift reaction is very much appreciated.
With the background you gave I just started to to create a patch
myself just to see that you a
Hello,
I have a .gitconfig in which I try to separate work and private stuff
by using includes which works great.
When using [include] the path is treated either
- relative to the including file (if the path itself relative)
- relative to the home directory if it starts with ~
- absolute if the p
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