Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > Thomas Rast <trast@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> Eric Sunshine <sunshine@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >>> The proposal currently is only for "-L /RE/,whatever" to behave in a >>> relative fashion, beginning the search at the end of the last range >>> specified via -L (or line 1 if there is no previous -L). >>> >>> Would it also make sense to support "-L +N,whatever" as relative to >>> the end of the last range specified via -L (or 1 if none). >> >> Sounds reasonable. >> >> I'm still not sure I am super-happy with /RE/ always being relative, >> though I see Junio's problem space as something worth solving. How does >> it interact with -L:RE? Do you now have to know in what order the >> functions appear in the source to correctly specify -L:foo -L:bar or >> similarly, -L/foo/,/^}/ -L/bar/,/^}/? What if we supported +/RE/ as the >> relative version? > > Two gripes I have are: > > (1) That sounds like making common things more cumbersome to ask. > > (2) In "-L /RE1/,/RE2/", you do not have to say +/RE2/ (and you > shouldn't have to). /RE3/ without any magic that starts > searching after the last match in "-L /RE1/,/RE2/ -L /RE3/,+4" > feels a lot more consistent than requiring a prefix plus. > > I am OK if you made /RE/, which starts searching immediately after > the last match, wrap around and continue the search at the beginning > upon finding nothing through the end of the file (and make sure you > stop if you passed the last match again). That would solve your "I > have two functions, and I can give them in any order", while keeping > the consistency with "In /RE1/,/RE2/, the latter is already relative > to the former". Dunno. It still doesn't really solve the order-of-L problem if there are multiple matches. I can't really say how they fare against each other. I have a bad feeling about the consistency of what results, but as you say, doing it the way I suggested isn't very consistent either. Perhaps in retrospect even -L/foo/,/bar/ should have required the + in +/bar/ to make it relative. I'll just leave it at that and let you decide what to do (presumably go ahead as you already outlined). I've never actually ever used multiple -L in the same log/blame invocation, anyway. I just think that when it comes to it, I'll have to read the manpage before I try... -- Thomas Rast trast@{inf,student}.ethz.ch -- 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