From: Thomas Guyot <tguyot@gmail.com>
To: Kai <k.vongrambusch@googlemail.com>, Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Cc: Johannes Sixt <j6t@kdbg.org>, git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Git is not recognizing some merge conflicts and just accepting incoming master version
Date: Sat, 23 Mar 2024 15:17:20 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <d8fa6ab2-949b-4d6f-9c8f-e80f2e524fb7@gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CA+XMOBuYVWwEE-p=3GHBUcnnM_jn0pneW1rbcQU124DjnJYycA@mail.gmail.com>
On 2024-03-16 05:19, Kai wrote:
> Thanks a lot for the explanations Brian and Hannes. That clarifies it
> a lot. I had not come across such a semantic issue in my limited
> experience with git before, so I was a bit thrown off.
>
> Given this behavior, I still think it would be a great feature for the
> person doing the merge to at least optionally be able to see
> highlighted parts of the code that had any changes between the base
> and the other two branches. Since these parts of the code could
> potentially cause problems much more than lines of code that have not
> been touched by any branch. But I guess that would be more a GUI
> feature than related to git directly, correct? Maybe there is already
> a GUI offering that?
The --diff-merges=combined option (or simply "-c") of git show is
probably what you're looking for.
There is also a dense-combined (or "--cc") option that skips seemingly
unrelated hunks, which doesn't mean these hunk aren't problematic, just
that there's 6+ lines appart.
Regards,
--
Thomas
prev parent reply other threads:[~2024-03-23 19:17 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 8+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2024-03-14 10:30 Git is not recognizing some merge conflicts and just accepting incoming master version Kai
2024-03-15 7:24 ` Johannes Sixt
2024-03-15 13:22 ` Kai
2024-03-15 21:47 ` brian m. carlson
2024-03-15 22:19 ` Johannes Sixt
2024-03-15 22:29 ` Junio C Hamano
2024-03-16 9:19 ` Kai
2024-03-23 19:17 ` Thomas Guyot [this message]
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