Michael J Gruber <git@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> Similarly I think it is not very consistent that one cannot combine any of >> the above options with the "S<string>" but instead have yet another option >> called "pickaxe-regex" to toggle between "fixed-string" and >> "extended-regexp" semantics for the argument passed to option "S". > > The defaults are different, and it is likely that users want to switch > one without switching the other. > > E.g., with -S you often use strings that you'd rather not have to quote > to guard them against the regexp engine. But the hypothetical -G that would look for a fixed string would be vastly different from -S, wouldn't it? The -S<string> option was invented to find a commit where one side of the comparison has that string in the blob and the other side does not; it shows commits where <string> appears different number of times in the before- and the after- blobs, because doing so does not hurt its primary use case to find commits where one side has one instance of <string> and the other side has zero. But -G<regexp> shows commits whose "git show $that_commit" output would have lines matching <regexp> as added or deleted. So you get different results from this history: (before) (after) a b b a c c As "git show" for such a commit looks like this: diff --git a/one b/one index de98044..0c81c28 100644 --- a/one +++ b/one @@ -1,3 +1,3 @@ -a b +a c "git log -Ga" would say it is a match. But from "git log -Sa"'s point of view, it is not a match; both sides have the same number of 'a' [*1*]. I think it would make sense to teach --fixed-strings or whatever option to -G just like it pays attention to ignore-case, but "-G --fixed-strings" cannot be "-S". They have different semantics. [Footnote] *1* This is because -S was envisioned as (and its behaviour has been maintained as such) a building block for Porcelain that does more than "git blame". You feed a _unique_ block of lines taken from the current contents as the <string> to quickly find the last commit that touched that area, and iteratively dig deeper. The -S option was meant to be used for that single step of digging, as a part of much more grand vision in $gmane/217, which I would still consider one of the most important messages on the mailing list, posted 10 years ago ;-) -- 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