On Tue, Feb 23 2021, Eric Sunshine wrote: > On Mon, Feb 22, 2021 at 4:45 AM Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason > <avarab@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Sun, Feb 21 2021, Eric Sunshine wrote: >> > Rather than making --orphan a boolean flag, we'd probably want to >> > mirror the behavior of the other commands and have <branch> be an >> > argument consumed by --orphan: >> > >> > git worktree add --orphan <branch> <path> >> > >> > That would make --orphan, -b, and -B mutually exclusive, much like >> > they are for git-checkout, and much like -c, -C, and --orphan are >> > mutually exclusive for git-switch. >> >> I see now (but didn't before, I haven't really used "switch" before) >> that that's how it works. >> >> But that doesn't seem to make much sense as a UI, maybe I'm missing >> something but how do you: >> >> git switch --orphan existing-branch >> >> Just like you can: >> >> git switch -C existing-branch <start-point> > > When responding to your initial email, I noticed this same shortcoming > of --orphan in both git-branch and git-switch, and assumed that's why > you made it a boolean in combination with -b/-B in "git worktree add". > Before writing that email, I did put a bit of thought into how one > might support a "force" mode but didn't include my thoughts in the > message. > >> It's actually this exact use-case that prompted me to write the --orphan >> patch. I wanted to create a "meta" orphan branch in my git.git, but had >> an existing local "meta" (from Jeff King) that I'd happened to have >> checked out long ago which I first needed to "git branch -D". >> >> Wouldn't it make more sense for a feature like this & back-compat to >> start with switch's "--orphan" implying "-c", but you could also supply >> "--orphan -C" instead? And in worktree have -b and -B work like they do >> for other branches. > > I'm not sure I follow. In git-switch, --orphan does not imply -c even > though --orphan also creates a new branch (thus seems to work similar > to -c); it is nevertheless mutually-exclusive with -c and -C. The same > goes for --orphan in git-branch. I think we're on the same page with regards to what I meant. I.e. I don't see how it makes sense to conflate the type of branch we want (orphan or not orphan) with whether we want to clobber that branch or not (switch -c or -C, or worktree -b or -B) > As far as combining --orphan and -C (or -c), I'm not sure how we would > arrange that using the existing parse_options() mechanism. It seems > too magical and has potential for weird corner cases. Isn't it just having --orphan be an OPTION_STRING with PARSE_OPT_LASTARG_DEFAULT. I.e. to support: git switch -b branch --orphan git switch -B branch --orphan git switch --orphan branch And: git worktree add -b branch --orphan git worktree add -B branch --orphan I didn't test it, just skimmed the code. > Since git-worktree doesn't yet support --orphan, we certainly have > more leeway and could go with your proposal of having --orphan be > boolean and always requiring it to be used in conjunction with -b/-B. > However, I'm quite hesitant to take that approach since it breaks with > existing precedent in git-branch and git-switch, in which case > --orphan takes its own argument (<branch>) and is mutually-exclusive > with -b/-B/-c/-C. In git-branch? Isn't it only git [checkout|switch] that takes --orphan? But yeah, I agree that it makes sense for "worktree add" to be consistent with "switch". I was just wondering if we couldn't fix what seems to me to be a small options UI issue while we're at it. > When I was pondering the issue before writing my original response, > two thoughts came to mind. (1) "git worktree add --force --orphan > <branch>" would be one way to make your case work; (2) given how > infrequently --orphan is used, we just punt and require people to > first use "git branch -D <branch>" if necessary (which has been the > status-quo for git-branch and git-switch). The latter thought is > superficially tempting, though it doesn't help in automation > situations since "git branch -D <branch>" errors out if <branch> > doesn't exist, so a script would first have to check for existence of > <branch> before attempting to delete it prior to using "git worktree > add --orphan <branch>". I think not having a -B or -C equivalent at all would be preferrable to having a --force special-case just to work around the lack of it for --orphan.