Re: Proposal: tell git a file has been renamed

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I read that git mv is basically the equivalent to deleting the old file, creating the new file, and adding the changes. Isn't it? If so it's gonna have the same problem as I have now.

--
Best regards,
Jeremy Morton (Jez)

On 22/04/2023 19:54, rsbecker@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
On Saturday, April 22, 2023 2:02 PM, Jeremy Morton wrote:
Yes, I know Linus specifically doesn't store file rename info in Git.
The trouble is, every now and then, I'll come across a situation where Git doesn't
successfully detect that I've renamed a file because I'm doing something like
renaming a class at the same time.  So I'll have a file OldClassNameTests.cs and a
NewClassNameTests.cs but a bunch of lines in that file have also changed from
OldClassName.DoThing() to NewClassName.DoThing().  I can clearly see that this is a
rename, but Git sees enough changed content that it doesn't realize it, and puts it in
as a delete/add, losing the content history.

The standard answer for this is to rename the file in one commit, then make the
changes.  That's fine if you know ahead of time you'll want to do this.  However it's a
total PITA if you have a bunch of changes and you realize that a rename has caused
this problem.  You now have to back out your changes to the renamed file, add the
rename, commit it, then re-apply the changes.

Could a command be added to git that means you tell Git that counts as a file
rename?  Git would add a marker to the staging area that the file has been renamed,
and upon commit, would first generate an additional commit for each rename before
generating the main commit, ensuring the rename operation counts as an actual
rename, and the content's history is maintained.

Would git mv work in your situation? You can stage changes to the original file, then use git mv. Or use git mv first. The rename shows as staged in any event.
--Randall





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