On 22.11.15 09:20, Sebastian Schuberth wrote: > On 21.11.2015 08:36, Torsten Bögershausen wrote: > >> git ls-files --eol gives an output like this: >> >> i/text-no-eol w/text-no-eol attr/text=auto t/t5100/empty > > I'm sorry if this has been discussed before, but hav you considered to use a header line and omit the prefixed from the columns instead? Like > > index working tree attributes file > > binary binary -text t/test-binary-2.png > text-lf text-lf eol=lf t/t5100/rfc2047-info-0007 > text-lf text-crlf eol=crlf doit.bat > text-crlf-lf text-crlf-lf locale/XX.po > > I believe this would be both easier to read for humans, and easier to parse for scripts that e.g. want to compare line endings in the index and working tree. > The problem I see is to make sure that there is always a separator, even when a field empty: rm zlib.c; git ls-file --eol #will include a line like this: i/text-lf w/ attr/ zlib.c or, as another example: git ls-files -o --eol i/ w/binary attr/ zlib.o And if there is no separator, it is harder to make it machine-parsable, if we e.g. extend the attributes to support "*text=autocrlf", or "*.text=autoinput" (But that is another story) If we replace "/[-a-z]" with "\t", the line has always a separator, but needs a somewhat wider screen: text-lf text-lf zlib.c >> + echo huh $1 [] good catch, thanks -- 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