On Wed, Nov 22, 2017 at 01:20:30PM -0800, Phil Hord wrote: > `git stash push -m foo` uses "foo" as the message for the stash. But > `git stash push -m"foo"` does not parse successfully. Similarly > `git stash push --message="My stash message"` also fails. The stash > documentation doesn't suggest this syntax should work, but gitcli > does and my fingers have learned this pattern long ago for `commit`. > > Teach `git stash` and `git store` to parse -mFoo and --message=Foo > the same as `git commit` would do. Even though it's an internal > function, add similar support to create_stash() for consistency. I definitely approve of the goal. The implementation looks pretty straightforward given the current parsing scheme. Many of our other scripts lean on "rev-parse --parseopt" to handle options. E.g.: OPTIONS="\ git foo [options] -- m,message= stash message " foo() { for i in "$@"; do echo " pre: $i"; done eval "$(echo -n "$OPTIONS" | git rev-parse --parseopt -- "$@")" for i in "$@"; do echo "post: $i"; done } foo -mmsg foo -m msg foo --message=msg foo --message msg should convert each of those into "-m msg". It also handles unique partial options like "--mess", though IMHO that is not that big a deal. Would it be possible to convert stash to use --parseopt? I'm fine if the answer is "no", or even "yes, but it's tricky so let's do this in the meantime". But I think that's the endgame we should be shooting for (or, of course, doing the whole thing in C, which I think somebody else is working on). -Peff