Liraz Siri <liraz.siri@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I'm running a few tests to figure out when git does the right thing on > merges, and I've discovered that git does not do the right thing if you > are creating new files in one branch in a directory that is renamed in > another. Well, it depends on your definition of "the right thing" as to whether or not Git does it. :-) > Merging edits of files in dir/ in one branch and renaming dir/ to > newdir/ in another branch works, but if you create files in the renamed > dir/ then after the merge they will still remain in dir/, rather than > newdir/. Yes. We don't actually track directories, we track contents of files. Renaming a directory in one branch and adding a file to that directory in the other branch does not imply that after the merge the new file belongs in the renamed location. Nor does it imply it should be in the old location, but that is where we currently put it. We probably could modify merge-recursive to rename new files added by the second branch if: - the file from the second branch does not exist in the merge base (hence it was added by the second branch); - the file from the second branch is located under a path where a prefix of directories exists within the merge base; - all files in the merge base under that path prefix were either deleted or renamed to the another path prefix by the first branch. but I'm not sure how often that occurs in practice that its worth implmenting, as the implementation is slightly non-trivial. Especially since it needs to be done for both sides. -- Shawn. - To unsubscribe from this list: 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