I was just working on a reply to my own email as I realized it was only
dumb-luck that
converted 1200 noisy changes into a couple of dozen. "-S" matches only
the string
itself, not the line the string resides on. So, -Sxyz will match if
"xyz" itself was
added or deleted in the diff (if "xyz" is on a line that's changed but
did not itself change,
it won't match). Funny that I actually knew this -- I use it to look for
System.out.println additions among other things.
Interestingly, if I wanted to know if an import changed (on top of
knowing if imports were
added or deleted), eg:
-import foo;
+import bar;
I couldn't tell you how to do it. The string "import" didn't change.
I'd've guessed that
"-S'import.*;' --pickaxe-regex" would have been sufficient, but that
doesn't work.
Jeff King wrote:
On Fri, Aug 22, 2008 at 09:51:16AM -0500, Brian Ericson wrote:
I'm wondering what it would take to teach git diff to invert the -S
string (like git grep).
I think you would have to figure out the desired semantics first.
I think mostly what I want is a happy marriage between git diff & git
grep so that if the
changed lines matched (or didn't match) the file would show up (or
not). I'd like to grep
added and removed lines (the diff itself) for a pattern and either
include or exclude the file
based on matches.
I'm finding git diff -S<string> [--pickaxe-regex] to be really useful,
but find I have cases where I want to ignore differences. For example, I
might not care if the only changes to a Java file, for example, are
related to import statements. I'd like to be able to do something like
"git diff -S'^import' --pickaxe-regex -v". I'll admit I can get by with
something like "git diff -S'^[^i]' --pickaxe-regex", but am pining for
-v/--invert-match.
I would have thought "-v" meant "match any changes which do not have
this pattern". But you want "match any changes that have any line which
does not have this pattern."
Right. Good summary! It's probably not accurate to use "-S" for my
interpretation unless
--pickaxe-regex behaved more as I outlined above. It's probably a
subtle enough difference
IOW, mine would not match any changes which used an import statement,
whereas yours would not match any changes which are _only_ import
statements.
The current behavior seems to work well to answer questions like "has
somebody added
a System.out.println", I'd like it to be able to ignore or consider
files based on line changes
that contain a string where the string itself did not change.
-Peff
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