On Thu, 2019-04-25 at 13:16 +0900, Junio C Hamano wrote: > > I think it is bad to silently ignore the option. With or without > this documentation update, I think it is sensible to update the code > so that it errors out when "--squash --commit" are both given at the > same time, just like when "--squash --no-ff" is given. Yes that makes sense. > Or make it "just work" as you said. Using a boolean variable as > tristate is something we do in many places and it by itself is not a > rocket science. You initialize the variable to -1 (unset), let > parse_options() to set it to 0/1 when "--[no-]commit" is seen, and > inspect after parse_options() finishes. If the variable is still > -1, you know the user wants "the default" behaviour. Ah I see - I was conflating OPT_BOOL with the parameter being a boolean as well without checking, but I see now that isn't the case. > > The "default" behaviour you are proposing would probably be > something like > > if (option_commit < 0) { > /* > * default to record the result in a commit. > * but --squash traditionally does not. > */ > if (!squash) > option_commit = 1; > else > option_commit = 0; > } > > But I suspect that the option parsing part is the least difficult in > the "make it just work" change. That is because I think that the > machinery to record the result in a commit is not expecting to be > asked to create a single-parent commit to record the result of the > squashing, so there may be need for adjusting to how the result > wants to be recorded before the code makes a commit. Yes I was going to try to allow the commit option as an experiment, and just see what happens. For now I'll send a v2 that has a doc update as well as prints a warning using the above technique. I'll dig more into what allowing --commit actually means (as time allows) - I'm definitely a newbie with git internals, and indeed this is my first posting here. Thanks for the feedback! -Vishal