> Subject: [PATCH/RFC] Add userdiff built-in pattern for CSS code We normally write subject lines as "<subsystem>: <description", hence that would be: userdiff: add built-in pattern for CSS william.duclot@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > CSS is widely used, motivating it being included as a built-in pattern. > It must be noted that the word_regex for CSS (i.e. the regex defining what is > a word in the language) does not consider '.' and '#' characters (in CSS > selectors) to be part of the word. This behavior is documented by the test > t/t4018/css-rule. This text wasn't properly wrapped. Please wrap around 72 columns (M-q on Emacs, or google "text wrap $youreditor" for others). Also, saying _what_ your patch does is not the most important question here. Focus on the _why_ in the commit message. (We had a real-life off-list discussion about this and I agree that it's a sensible behavior, but others may disagree) > Add the info in documentation that CSS is now built-in. This doesn't add much to the patch (we can already see that from the patch itself). I'd remove it. Missing sign-off (yours, and you can add mine to mark the fact that I allow you to contribute to Git as part of your student project). > +PATTERNS("css", > + "^([^,{}]+)((,[^}]*\\{)|([ \t]*\\{))$", > + /* -- */ > + /* This regex comes from W3C CSS specs. Should theorically also allow ISO s/theorically/theoretically/ -- Matthieu Moy http://www-verimag.imag.fr/~moy/ -- 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