El 12/4/2009, a las 14:45, Matthieu Moy escribió:
Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
You can say 'd' and then ^C, I think.
Yes, you /can/, and that's what I'm doing right now in this situation.
But that's undocumented, not so intuitive (I found out I could do that
after trying ^C alone, which doesn't work, staged content is recorded
on disk at the end of the file only, not after each prompt), ...
I thought the situation was common enough to deserve an explicit
command. The 'd' command is natural for "git add -i" + patch
subcommand, but for "git add -p", I found 'd' mostly useless, and I
really want a "quit" command.
Sure, I can live without it, but if other people would like to have
it, please speak now ;-).
Yes, I'd like it too. I've been using ^C a lot, but I'd never noticed
that changes weren't staged except at the end of each file. Thanks for
bringing it up; you might have saved some people (including me) from
being bitten by it at some point.
Wincent
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