> On 04 Dec 2017, at 22:42, Jeff King <p...@peff.net> wrote:
> 
> On Mon, Dec 04, 2017 at 10:31:15PM +0100, Lars Schneider wrote:
> 
>>>> I would like to add "for your input" or "for you" to convey 
>>>> that Git is not waiting for the machine but for the user.
>>>> 
>>>>   "hint: Launched editor. Waiting for your input..."
>>>> 
>>>> Would that work for you?
>>> 
>>> I guess "input" was the part that I found funny/confusing. The only
>>> thing we know is that we're waiting on the editor process to finish, and
>>> everything else is making assumptions about what's happening in the
>>> editor.
>> 
>> I see. How about:
>> 
>> "hint: Launched editor. Waiting for your action..."
>> (my preference)
>> 
>> or
>> 
>> "hint: Launched editor. Waiting for you..."
> 
> Better, IMHO, though I still think literally saying:
> 
>  hint: Waiting for your editor to exit...
> 
> is the most accurate, which I think makes it clear that you must _exit_
> your editor, not just save and close the file.

I think "exit" would be confusing because most graphical editors (Sublime,
Textmate, Notepad++, ...) can open multiple files and do not need to exit. 
The requirement is indeed save and close the file.

How about:

    hint: Waiting for your editor to close the file...

I generally like that as this is technical correct from all angles.
My only nit would be that "the file" is a bit imprecise... but
that's probably no problem.

- Lars

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