On Wed, Sep 26, 2018 at 08:16:36AM -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote: > > This introduces a help.followAlias config option that transparently > > redirects to (the first word of) the alias text (provided of course it > > is not a shell command), similar to the option for autocorrect of > > misspelled commands. > > While I do agree with you that it would sometimes be very handy if > "git cp --help" behaved identically to "git cherry-pick --help" just > like "git cp -h" behaves identically to "git cherry-pick -h" when > you have "[alias] cp = cherry-pick", I do not think help.followAlias > configuration is a good idea. I may know, perhaps because I use it > all the time, by heart that "cp" is aliased to "cherry-pick" and > want "git cp --help" to directly give me the manpage, but I may not > remember if "co" was commit or checkout and want to be concisely > told that it is aliased to checkout without seeing the full manpage. > Which means you'd want some way to command line override anyway, and > having to say "git -c help.followAlias=false cp --help" is not a > great solution. > > If we expect users to use "git cp --help" a lot more often than "git > help cp" (or the other way around), one way to give a nicer experience > may be to unconditionally make "git cp --help" to directly show the > manpage of cherry-pick, while keeping "git help cp" to never do > that. Then those who want to remember what "co" is aliased to can > ask "git help co". I like that direction much better. I also wondered if we could leverage the "-h" versus "--help" distinction. The problem with printing the alias definition along with "--help" is that the latter will start a pager that obliterates what we wrote before (and hence all of this delay trickery). But for "-h" we generally expect the command to output a usage message. So what if the rules were: - "git help cp" shows "cp is an alias for cherry-pick" (as it does now) - "git cp -h" shows "cp is an alias for cherry-pick", followed by actually running "cherry-pick -h", which will show the usage message. For a single-word command that does very little, since the usage message starts with "cherry-pick". But if your alias is actually "cp = cherry-pick -n", then it _is_ telling you extra information. And this could even work with "!" aliases: we define it, and then it is up to the alias to handle "-h" sensibly. - "git cp --help" opens the manpage for cherry-pick. We don't bother with the alias definition, as it's available through other means (and thus we skip the obliteration/timing thing totally). This really only works for non-! aliases. Those would continue to show the alias definition. > If you have "[alias] cp = cherry-pick -n", split_cmdline discards > "-n" and the follow-alias prompt does not even tell you that it did > so, and you get "git help cherry-pick". This code somehow expects > you to know to jump to the section that describes the "--no-commit" > option. I do not think that is a reasonable expectation. > > When you have "[alias] cp = cherry-pick -n", "git cp --help" should > not do "git help cherry-pick". Only a single word that exactly > matches a git command should get this treatment. I'm not sure I agree. A plausible scenario (under the rules I gave above) is: $ git cp -h 'cp' is aliased to 'cherry-pick -n' usage: git cherry-pick ... $ git cp --help I.e., you already know the "-n" part, and now you want to dig further. Of course one could just type "git cherry-pick --help" since you also know that, too. But by that rationale, one could already do: $ git help cp $ git help cherry-pick without this patch at all. -Peff