On Sun, Dec 02, 2018 at 11:30:19AM -0500, Robert P. J. Day wrote: > > testing adding by patch for the very first time (i've just never > needed this), and reading the "progit" book and reading the man page, > and the impression i'm getting is that running "git add -p" (going > straight to patch mode) is supposed to be equivalent to running "git > add -i", then typing "p" to switch to patch mode. > > that is most emphatically not what i'm seeing. if i run "git add > -p", then i get to what i expect -- the patch subsystem: > > $ git add -p > diff --git a/README.asc b/README.asc > index fa40bad..840e85b 100644 > --- a/README.asc > +++ b/README.asc > @@ -1,3 +1,9 @@ > +change 1 > + > + > + > + > + > = Pro Git, Second Edition > > Welcome to the second edition of the Pro Git book. > Stage this hunk [y,n,q,a,d,j,J,g,/,e,?]? > > but if i start with "git add -i", there seems to be no way to get to > patch mode -- certainly "p" doesn't do it. am i stupidly missing > something trivial? is the explanation misleading or inncomplete? > > rday > > -- > After selecting 'p', what do you get? You should see a list of modified files. You can select the files you want to stage by the listed numbers. After you selected those files, you press enter, and then you will get the options you'll also see with git add -p. Kevin