From e1ccf53a60657930ae7892387736c8b6a91ec610 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yasushi SHOJI Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2005 02:29:10 +0900 Subject: [PATCH] [PATCH] Escape asciidoc's built-in em-dash replacement AsciiDoc replace '--' with em-dash (—) by default. em-dash looks a lot like a single long dash and it's very confusing when we are talking about command options. Section 21.2.8 'Replacements' of AsciiDoc's User Guide says that a backslash in front of double dash prevent the replacement. This patch does just that. Signed-off-by: Yasushi SHOJI Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano --- Documentation/cvs-migration.txt | 2 +- Documentation/diffcore.txt | 14 +++++++------- Documentation/hooks.txt | 4 ++-- Documentation/tutorial.txt | 4 ++-- 4 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/cvs-migration.txt b/Documentation/cvs-migration.txt index 6e48bdef9..390a72392 100644 --- a/Documentation/cvs-migration.txt +++ b/Documentation/cvs-migration.txt @@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ you would use git-rev-list and git-diff-tree like this: nitfol(); }' -We have already talked about the "--stdin" form of git-diff-tree +We have already talked about the "\--stdin" form of git-diff-tree command that reads the list of commits and compares each commit with its parents. The git-whatchanged command internally runs the equivalent of the above command, and can be used like this: diff --git a/Documentation/diffcore.txt b/Documentation/diffcore.txt index a0ffe85a2..1908b92f3 100644 --- a/Documentation/diffcore.txt +++ b/Documentation/diffcore.txt @@ -22,8 +22,8 @@ The git-diff-* family works by first comparing two sets of files: - git-diff-index compares contents of a "tree" object and the - working directory (when '--cached' flag is not used) or a - "tree" object and the index file (when '--cached' flag is + working directory (when '\--cached' flag is not used) or a + "tree" object and the index file (when '\--cached' flag is used); - git-diff-files compares contents of the index file and the @@ -164,11 +164,11 @@ similarity score different from the default 50% by giving a number after "-M" or "-C" option (e.g. "-M8" to tell it to use 8/10 = 80%). -Note. When the "-C" option is used with --find-copies-harder +Note. When the "-C" option is used with `\--find-copies-harder` option, git-diff-\* commands feed unmodified filepairs to diffcore mechanism as well as modified ones. This lets the copy detector consider unmodified files as copy source candidates at -the expense of making it slower. Without --find-copies-harder, +the expense of making it slower. Without `\--find-copies-harder`, git-diff-\* commands can detect copies only if the file that was copied happened to have been modified in the same changeset. @@ -220,7 +220,7 @@ diffcore-pickaxe This transformation is used to find filepairs that represent changes that touch a specified string, and is controlled by the --S option and the --pickaxe-all option to the git-diff-* +-S option and the `\--pickaxe-all` option to the git-diff-* commands. When diffcore-pickaxe is in use, it checks if there are @@ -229,9 +229,9 @@ whose "result" side does not. Such a filepair represents "the string appeared in this changeset". It also checks for the opposite case that loses the specified string. -When --pickaxe-all is not in effect, diffcore-pickaxe leaves +When `\--pickaxe-all` is not in effect, diffcore-pickaxe leaves only such filepairs that touches the specified string in its -output. When --pickaxe-all is used, diffcore-pickaxe leaves all +output. When `\--pickaxe-all` is used, diffcore-pickaxe leaves all filepairs intact if there is such a filepair, or makes the output empty otherwise. The latter behaviour is designed to make reviewing of the changes in the context of the whole diff --git a/Documentation/hooks.txt b/Documentation/hooks.txt index ca0efeecc..57f472087 100644 --- a/Documentation/hooks.txt +++ b/Documentation/hooks.txt @@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ pre-commit ---------- This hook is invoked by `git-commit`, and can be bypassed -with `--no-verify` option. It takes no parameter, and is +with `\--no-verify` option. It takes no parameter, and is invoked before obtaining the proposed commit log message and making a commit. Exiting with non-zero status from this script causes the `git-commit` to abort. @@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ commit-msg ---------- This hook is invoked by `git-commit`, and can be bypassed -with `--no-verify` option. It takes a single parameter, the +with `\--no-verify` option. It takes a single parameter, the name of the file that holds the proposed commit log message. Exiting with non-zero status causes the `git-commit` to abort. diff --git a/Documentation/tutorial.txt b/Documentation/tutorial.txt index 6e100dbb6..928a22cd7 100644 --- a/Documentation/tutorial.txt +++ b/Documentation/tutorial.txt @@ -828,7 +828,7 @@ which will very loudly warn you that you're now committing a merge (which is correct, so never mind), and you can write a small merge message about your adventures in git-merge-land. -After you're done, start up `gitk --all` to see graphically what the +After you're done, start up `gitk \--all` to see graphically what the history looks like. Notice that `mybranch` still exists, and you can switch to it, and continue to work with it if you want to. The `mybranch` branch will not contain the merge, but next time you merge it @@ -883,7 +883,7 @@ not actually do a merge. Instead, it just updated the top of the tree of your branch to that of the `master` branch. This is often called 'fast forward' merge. -You can run `gitk --all` again to see how the commit ancestry +You can run `gitk \--all` again to see how the commit ancestry looks like, or run `show-branch`, which tells you this. ------------------------------------------------ -- 2.30.2