Elijah Newren <newren@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Tue, May 11, 2021 at 7:03 AM Sergey Organov <sorganov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > Junio C Hamano <gitster@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> [...] >> >> > If we enable "some kind of diff" for "-m", I actually think that by >> > default "git log -m" should be turned into "log --cc". As you told >> > Alex in your response, "log -m -p" is a quite unpleasant format to >> > read---it is there only because it was the only thing we had before >> > we invented "-c/--cc". >> >> Please, no! --cc has unfortunate feature of outputting exactly nothing >> for a lot of merge commits, causing even more confusion than historical >> "-m -p" format. >> >> The best default for -m output is --diff-merges=first-parent. Everybody >> is familiar with it, and it's useful. >> >> > But that might be outside the scope of this series. I dunno, but if >> > there is no other constraints (like backward compatibility issues), >> > I have a moderately strong preference to use "--cc" over "-m -p" >> > from the get go for unconfigured people, rather than forcing >> > everybody to configure >> >> I rather have strong preference for --diff-merges=first-parent. --cc is >> only suitable for Git experts, and they know how to get what they want >> anyway. Yep, by using --cc. Why spare yet another short option for that? > > Interesting. I have a strong preference for --diff-merges=remerge > (yeah, I know it's not upstream, but it's been ready to submit for > months, but just backed up behind the other ort changes. Sorry, I > can't push those through any faster). I've had others using it for > about 9 months now. Once somebody uses it for 9 months and starts to understand what it is and really loves it, she can still set log.diffMerges=remerge (new feature) and have fun. > > I think --cc is a lot better than -m for helping you find what users > changed when they did the merge, Yes, but it doesn't mean it should be the default. In my workflows, the first thing that matters is what commit did what changes on the current branch. I don't typically care what the user changed during the merge operation, only about the result. If I do care, then only after I find the merge commit is responsible, and I can then use --cc if I want to. > but I agree the format is somewhat difficult for many users to > understand. (--diff-merges=remerge, or --remerge-diff, fixes these > problems, IMO.) I think --diff-merges=first-parent, while fine when > explicitly requested on the command line, would be wildly misleading > as a default because it would attribute changes to a merge commit that > were made elsewhere. No, it's exactly this merge commit that made these changes to the current branch. The changes you refer to have been made on another branch, and not by this particular merge commit, and we fortunately have the reference to those commits through the second parent of this one. > >> Overall, let's rather make -m give diff to the first parent by default. >> Simple. Useful. Not confusing. > > I think it's confusing. I think it isn't, once you accept that merge commit does introduce changes to the branch, by itself. Thanks, -- Sergey Organov