Stefan Beller <[email protected]> writes:
>> If I were to explicitly ignore that file, then even though I know
>> whats-cooking.txt is not ignored,
>>
>> $ git add whats-coo<HT>
>>
>> would not offer anything. I'd be left scratching my head, wondering
>> if I mistyped the early part of the filename (e.g. "wahts-coo<HT>"?).
>
> Well, git add cannot do anything with either of the files, so why would
> it offer to complete to one of them?
>
> In an ideal world it would tell you whats-cooking.txt doesn't need
> adding and whats-cooking.txt+ is ignored locally so excluded from
> being added.
Exactly my point that you omitted from your quoting ;-)
Because the completion cannot give such an explanation, the
behaviour gives an unnecessary confusion to the user. If it offered
whats-cooking.txt as a candidate, at least the behaviour would make
sense to the user. "Doesn't need adding" is quite different from
"must not be added". In other words, "git add A && git add A" does
not hurt, but "git add A~" would because the latter would only makes
you see unnecessary error message ("You need -f if you really mean
it").
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