Matthias Beyer <mail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > I know, I can fix this by fixing the clean task in my Makefile. But > maybe someone somewhere on this world doesn't know the git internals > as good as me (and, of course, my coworker). Is there _any chance > at all_ that this gets mentioned somewhere, so others don't fall into > this pit? Surely, we are here to please ;-) All of us want to make sure newbies do not shoot themselves in the foot. But the problem is what exactly should be mentioned. With a fresh wound with your LaTeX project still in your mind, you may be tempted to special case ".idx", but other newbies may inflict the same kind of hurt on themselves with different "find" patterns, e.g. $ find . -name '[0-9a-f]*[0-9a-f]' -type f -print | xargs rm -f when they know their project creates hexadecimal-numbered temoprary files, or whatever other pattern that match the files they do not care about, that also happens to match whatever is in $GIT_DIR. The only common caution that helps us to make sure "others do not fall into this pit" is "Files and directories in $GIT_DIR are used to record your work; do not muck with them unless you know what you are doing e.g. manually repairing a corrupt repository", but that is a bit lame, isn't it? It is tempting to suggest "git clean '*.idx'", but that is a good fit in the Makefile only when you know everybody involved in the project works in a checkout from Git, not from a tarball extract, and does not apply to projects in general. -- 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