On Thu, Aug 29, 2019 at 2:42 PM Pratyush Yadav <me@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 30/08/19 02:00AM, Pratyush Yadav wrote: > > On 29/08/19 04:07PM, Derrick Stolee wrote: > > > On 8/29/2019 2:54 PM, Phillip Wood wrote: > > > > Hi Stolee > > > > > > > > On 29/08/2019 18:01, Derrick Stolee via GitGitGadget wrote: > > > >> + > > > >> + if (argc == 3 && !strcmp(argv[1], "-b")) { > > > >> + /* > > > >> + * User ran 'git checkout -b <branch>' and expects > > > > > > > > What if the user ran 'git checkout -b<branch>'? Then argc == 2. > > > > > > Good catch. I'm tempted to say "don't do that" to keep this > > > simple. They won't have incorrect results, just slower than > > > the "with space" option. > > > > > > However, if there is enough interest in correcting the "-b<branch>" > > > case, then I can make another attempt at this. > > > > You can probably do this with: > > > > !strncmp(argv[1], "-b", 2) > > > > The difference is so little, might as well do it IMO. > > Actually, that is not correct. I took a quick look before writing this > and missed the fact that argc == 3 is the bigger problem. > > Thinking a little more about this, you can mix other options with > checkout -b, like --track. You can also specify <start_point>. > > Now I don't know enough about this optimization you are doing to know > whether we need to optimize when these options are given, but at least > for --track I don't see any reason not to. > > So maybe you are better off using something like getopt() (warning: > getopt modifies the input string so you probably want to duplicate it) > if you want to support all cases. Though for this simple case you can > probably get away by just directly scanning the argv list for "-b" > (using strncmp instead of strcmp to account for "-b<branch-name>) NO. This would be unsafe to use if <start_point> is specified. I think either -f or -m together with -b make no sense unless <start_point> is specified, but if they do make sense separately, I'm guessing this hack should not be used with those flags. And additional flags may appear in the future that should not be used together with this hack. Personally, although I understand the desire to support any possible cases in general, *this is a performance hack*. As such, it should be as simple and localized as possible. I don't think supporting old-style stuck flags (-b$BRANCH) is worth complicating this. I'm even leery of adding support for --track (do any users of huge repos use -b with --track? Does anyone at all use --track anymore? I'm not sure I've ever seen any user use that flag in the last 10 years other than myself.) Besides, in the *worst* possible case, the command the user specifies works just fine...it just takes a little longer. My opinion is that Stolee's patch is perfect as-is and should not be generalized at all. Just my $0.02, Elijah