On Thu, Dec 15, 2016 at 08:30:52AM +0100, Torsten Bögershausen wrote: > > > Would it be reasonable to > > > write: > > > > > > /* Copy initial part of absolute path, converting separators on Windows */ > > > const char *end = src + offset_1st_component(src); > > > while (src < end) { > > > char c = *src++; > > > if (c == '\\') > > > c = '/'; > > > *dst++ = c; > > > } > > Makes a lot of sense! I haven't had an opportunity, though, to test > > on Windows. > I'm not sure, if a conversion should be done here, in this part of code. > To my knowledge, > > C:\dir1\file > is the same > as > C:/dir1/file > and that is handled by windows. I don't have an opinion either way on what Windows would want, but note that the function already _does_ convert separators to slashes. With Johannes's original patch, you'd end up with a mix, like: \\server\share/dir1/file So this conversion is really just retaining the original behavior, and making it consistent throughout the path. Which isn't to say that the function as it currently exists isn't a little bit buggy. :) One of the points of normalizing, though, is that Git can then do textual comparisons between the output. So I think there's value in having a canonical internal representation, even if the OS could handle more exotic ones. -Peff