Øystein Walle <[email protected]> writes:
> When trying to pop/apply a stash specified with an argument containing
> spaces the user will see an error:
>
> $ git stash pop 'stash@{two hours ago}'
> Too many revisions specified: stash@{two hours ago}
>
> This happens because word splitting is used to count non-option
> arguments. Instead shift the positional arguments as the options are
> processed; the number of arguments left is then the number we're after.
[...]
> for opt
> do
> case "$opt" in
> -q|--quiet)
> GIT_QUIET=-t
> + shift
> ;;
> --index)
> INDEX_OPTION=--index
> + shift
> ;;
> -*)
> FLAGS="${FLAGS}${FLAGS:+ }$opt"
> + shift
> ;;
> esac
> done
>
> - set -- $REV
> -
But this isn't correct any more, is it? You unconditionally shift off
arguments when you see something of the form -*, even if what you shift
is not what you're currently looking at.
For example, without this patch:
$ g stash apply stash@{0} --index
On branch next
Your branch is ahead of 'origin/next' by 41 commits.
(use "git push" to publish your local commits)
[blah blah]
but with this patch:
$ g stash apply stash@{0} --index
--index is not valid reference
Granted, git-stash is extremely inconsistent in its handling of options.
For example, 'git stash save foo -k' does _not_ treat -k as an option.
If you set out to unify this (not just randomly (un)break one
subroutine) I'd be all for it.
--
Thomas Rast
[email protected]
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