Ping Yin venit, vidit, dixit 24.10.2008 15:30: > On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 8:54 PM, Michael J Gruber > <git@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Ping Yin venit, vidit, dixit 24.10.2008 14:37: >>> So what should i do if i want it added as text file? >> You should give us more detail on the file ;) >> What's the extension, what's the typical content? It may be a simple >> matter of specifying attributes. >> Do ordinary diff and grep recognize your files as text? >> >> Michael >> > > It's just an xml file. I guess maybe there are some hidden characters > at the beginning. I will figure it out later because i have no access > to that file right now. Maybe it's in an encoding which is not available on the machine you're using git on? > I'm just ask this problem in general sense. So is there a general way > to specify whether a file is text or binary? Bruce suggested a good read. To save you some time: You want to say *.xml diff or *.xml diff crlf in one of the attributes files, depending on whether you want git to possibly translate line endings (which depends on other settings also). Note that the "content type" of the file plays a role only for diffs and stats, not for the actual storage (except for, possibly, crlf conversion). Cheers, Michael -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html