On 3/5/06, Alexandre Julliard <julliard@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > You can use both. The VC backend is a per-file mode, that's handy when > you are editing a file and want a quick diff/revert/commit of just > that file; the commands are executed directly from the buffer > containing the file. When making bigger changes, you should use the > git-status mode (the one in git.el), which is a tree browser that > gives you a view of the whole project. So I should use a combination of both? Hmmm. Worth exploring, can you give us a quick guide on getting started with it? (Or where should I read? I'm not that good with emacs)... > > Can we get a new merge conflict mode that generates .rej files? Emacs > > is superb at dealing with conflicts formatted that way. OTOH, it may > > be able to deal smartly with diff3-style conflicts if it knows how to > > talk with the VC backend -- I think the cvs mode can do that. > > What emacs mode do you use to resolve conflicts? From the git-status > buffer, if you edit a file with 'f' it will automatically turn on > smerge mode if there are conflicts, or you can edit it in ediff merge > mode with 'd E' like under pcl-cvs. Is that what you mean? Oh. Ah. Ok! I'll have to try this! So far, I've had good luck following this guide: http://wiki.gnuarch.org/Process_20_2a_2erej_20files which is targetted pretty much at dumb emacs users. Like me ;-) martin - : send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html