Hi Eric,

On Tue, 17 Jul 2018, Eric Sunshine wrote:

> On Tue, Jul 17, 2018 at 6:31 AM Johannes Schindelin
> <johannes.schinde...@gmx.de> wrote:
> > On Wed, 30 May 2018, Eric Sunshine wrote:
> 
> > > +     if (range_diff) {
> > > +             struct argv_array ranges = ARGV_ARRAY_INIT;
> > > +             infer_diff_ranges(&ranges, range_diff, head);
> > > +             if (get_range_diff(&diff, &ranges))
> > > +                     die(_("failed to generate range-diff"));
> >
> > BTW I like to have an extra space in front of all the range-diff lines, to
> > make it easier to discern them from the rest.
> 
> I'm not sure what you mean. Perhaps I'm misreading your comment.

Sorry, I was really unclear.

In the cover letters sent out by GitGitGadget (or earlier, my
mail-patch-series.sh command), I took pains to indent the entire
range-diff (or interdiff) with a single space. That is, the footer
"Range-diff vs v<n>:" is not indented at all, but all subsequent lines of
the range-diff have a leading space.

The original reason was to stop confusing `git apply` when sending an
interdiff as part of a single patch without a cover letter (in which case
mail-patch-series.sh inserted the interdiff below the `---` marker, and
the interdiff would have looked like the start of the real diff
otherwise).

In the meantime, I got used to this indentation so much that I do not want
to miss it, it is a relatively easy and intuitive visual marker.

This, however, will be harder to achieve now that you are using the
libified range-diff.

> > > @@ -1438,6 +1480,7 @@ int cmd_format_patch(int argc, const char **argv, 
> > > const char *prefix)
> > > +     const char *range_diff = NULL;
> >
> > Maybe `range_diff_opt`? It's not exactly the range diff that is contained
> > in this variable.
> 
> I could, though I was trying to keep it shorter rather than longer.
> This is still the same in the re-roll, but I can rename it if you
> insist.

I think it will confuse me in the future if I read `range_diff` and even
the data type suggests that it could hold the output of a `git range-diff
<options>` run.

So I would like to insist.

> > > +format_patch () {
> > > +     title=$1 &&
> > > +     range=$2 &&
> > > +     test_expect_success "format-patch --range-diff ($title)" '
> > > +             git format-patch --stdout --cover-letter 
> > > --range-diff=$range \
> > > +                     master..unmodified >actual &&
> > > +             grep "= 1: .* s/5/A" actual &&
> > > +             grep "= 2: .* s/4/A" actual &&
> > > +             grep "= 3: .* s/11/B" actual &&
> > > +             grep "= 4: .* s/12/B" actual
> >
> > I guess this might make sense if `format_patch` was not a function, but it
> > is specifically marked as a function... so... shouldn't these `grep`s also
> > be using function parameters?
> 
> A later patch adds a second test which specifies the same ranges but
> in a different way, so the result will be the same, hence the
> hard-coded grep'ing. The function avoids repetition across the two
> tests. I suppose I could do this a bit differently, though, to avoid
> pretending it's a general-purpose function.

If you can think of a way that would make this easier to read for, say,
myself if I ever find myself debugging a regression caught by this test, I
would appreciate that.

Ciao,
Dscho

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