I've never sent patches using git before so I thought it would be useful to make a small test. I read ./Documentation/SubmittingPatches and I sent these to myself and practiced applying them using `git am`, and I also compiled and checked the revised manual pages to see that they format correctly. Unfortunately it was too late to run 'git diff --check' because I had already committed the changes to my repo, but I don't see any whitespace highlighted when I run 'git log -p'. I'm sure I'm doing something wrong, so please let me know what it is! Here's the command I'll use to send the messages (without --dry-run): git send-email --to "Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx>" --cc git@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx --cc-cmd ./contrib/contacts/git-contacts outgoing/ --dry-run By the way for some reason git-contacts shows more names when I run it on the patch hash than when I give it the patch name: $ ./contrib/contacts/git-contacts 222580cb60ee64f7b81fed64ec8fbfc81952557f Sébastien Guimmara <sebastien.guimmara@xxxxxxxxx> Nguyễn Thái Ngọc Duy <pclouds@xxxxxxxxx> Eric Sunshine <sunshine@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> $ ./contrib/contacts/git-contacts ./outgoing/0002-git-column.1-clarify-initial-description-provide-exa.patch Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> Not sure what's going on here, but the changes I propose seem fairly straightforward...(?) Frederick Eaton (3): git-archimport.1: specify what kind of Arch we're talking about git-column.1: clarify initial description, provide examples git-describe.1: clarify that "human readable" is also git-readable Documentation/git-archimport.txt | 5 +++-- Documentation/git-column.txt | 35 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- Documentation/git-describe.txt | 4 +++- 3 files changed, 39 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) -- 2.19.0