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Fix early wrapping of the command line when using git-prompt.sh and in a git repository #1691

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gitgitgadget bot commented Mar 11, 2024

Welcome to GitGitGadget

Hi @rquadling, and welcome to GitGitGadget, the GitHub App to send patch series to the Git mailing list from GitHub Pull Requests.

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gitgitgadget bot commented Mar 11, 2024

There are issues in commit eb1f7b8:
Fix early wrapping of the command line when using git-prompt.sh and in a git repository
Commit checks stopped - the message is too short
First line of commit message is too long (> 76 columns)
Commit not signed off

@dscho
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dscho commented Mar 11, 2024

/allow

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gitgitgadget bot commented Mar 11, 2024

User rquadling is now allowed to use GitGitGadget.

@rquadling rquadling force-pushed the master branch 2 times, most recently from 2d5ad4f to d1e4c63 Compare March 11, 2024 15:03
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gitgitgadget bot commented Mar 11, 2024

There are issues in commit d1e4c63:
Fix early wrapping of the command line when using git-prompt.sh
Commit not signed off

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gitgitgadget bot commented Mar 11, 2024

There are issues in commit d1e4c63:
Fix early wrapping of the command line when using git-prompt.sh
Commit not signed off

@dscho
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dscho commented Mar 11, 2024

Commit not signed off

@rquadling for details what this is all about, see https://git-scm.com/docs/SubmittingPatches#sign-off

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gitgitgadget bot commented Mar 11, 2024

There are issues in commit bae1e32:
Fix early wrapping of the command line when using git-prompt.sh
Commit not signed off

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gitgitgadget bot commented Mar 11, 2024

There are issues in commit 626324d:
Fix early wrapping of the command line when using git-prompt.sh
Commit not signed off

When running git-prompt in Bash, the lack of \001 and \002 causes
the command line to wrap early.

The issue is the current \001 and \002 were not themselves escaped
and so resulted in binary 0b1 and 0b10 being present, rather than
the strings "\001" and "\002".

Signed-off-by: Richard Quadling <RQuadling@GMail.com>
@briantracy
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I am a first time contributor, could you please /allow my PR: #1692

@rquadling
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I don't really see the point of using email as a way to submit a PR to a repo that has all the functionality already in play.

I found an issue, supplied a PR to the project responsible using a mechanism that is VERY VERY well understood.

Considering the PR is actually on a very remote aspect of the project, it's not worth my time having to subscribe to a mailing list, send one PR, wait for it to be merged, delete all the emails not related to the PR, unsubscribe when the PR is merged.

Considering I've got over 50,000 unread email ... it's all simply too much noise. The Git project has the PR. If they use it, then the issue gets solved. If they don't, then the issue and complaints, and links to gist detailing the fix locally which will get overwritten every time there's an upgrade will just continue.

@dscho
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dscho commented Apr 8, 2024

The Git project has the PR.

That's incorrect, @rquadling. GitGitGadget is merely a tool trying to help, it is not run by the Git project itself. Therefore, nobody of the Git project had a look at your patch yet, they did not even see it.

@rquadling
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So what's next? is the PR going to continue on a path to be reviwed/accepted/rejected?

@dscho
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dscho commented Apr 9, 2024

So what's next? is the PR going to continue on a path to be reviwed/accepted/rejected?

The PR won't go anywhere unless you /submit it, as described here.

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