On Wed, 22 Nov 2017, Jeff King wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 21, 2017 at 10:45:52PM +0100, Kevin Daudt wrote:
>
> > > - * Without disambiguating `--`, Git makes a reasonable guess, but errors
> > > - out and asking you to disambiguate when ambiguous. E.g. if you have a
> > > + * Without a disambiguating `--`, Git makes a reasonable guess, but can
> > > + error out, asking you to disambiguate when ambiguous. E.g. if you
> > > have a
> >
> > 'Can' error out implies that it sometimes would not error out when there
> > is ambiguity. Are there situation where git does not error out in that
> > case?
>
> I read the rest of the thread, and I think the question here is not
> about Git's behavior, but about parsing this sentence.
>
> Without a "--" Git can sometimes do what you want. Or it may error out,
> if what you asked for is ambiguous. And that sentence is trying to cover
> those cases separately, and the "can" only applies to the ambiguous
> case.
>
> It's pretty clear to me as it is, but maybe we can write it differently.
> Like:
>
> Without a disambiguating `--`, Git makes a reasonable guess. If it
> cannot guess (because your request is ambiguous), then it will error
> out.
ok, i'll give this another try, given that there are two independent
points to be made here:
1) even without the "--", git can generally parse the command and do
the right thing (or do a *valid* thing, given its heuristics)
2) occasionally, without the "--", the command is really and truly
ambiguous, at which point git will fail and tell you to disambiguate
not the wording i will use, but can we agree that those are the two
points to be made here?
rday
--
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Robert P. J. Day Ottawa, Ontario, CANADA
http://crashcourse.ca
Twitter: http://twitter.com/rpjday
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