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I've got a file with the following changes:

# Manual hunk edit mode -- see bottom for a quick guide @@ -280,6 +281,7 @@ if( foo ) { bla(); - test( true ); + removeThis(); + test( false ); } else 

How can I commit the change for test() only, and avoid committing removeThis() ? Each time I try to edit the hunk manually git tells me it does not apply cleanly.

1 Answer 1

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How can I commit the change for test() only, and avoid committing removeThis() ?

That's simple.

  1. Enter add -i mode, then select 5: [p]atch by pressing pEnter.

  2. Choose your file by entering its number and press Enter to start editing patches.

  3. Press e to edit your hunk (you seem to have succesfully reached here by doing git add -p instead).

  4. Delete the line with removeThis() completely, with + sign at the beginning as well. Do not touch anything else! The resultant text should look like a patch for the change you're committing.

  5. Save the file and exit the editor.

The patch will apply well. I've just checked. Check again too--maybe it's another hunk that doesn't apply?

Other than that, your , symbols near the +/- look suspicious. Perhaps, your patch and diff programs are somehow out of sync? Try removing the ,s from the hunk as well.

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5 Comments

Thanks! I also figured out my editor (notepad2) saved the file in LF line endings. Saving them in LRLF endings fixed the final problem.
FYI, the comma's in front of the lines are typo's typing the post here, they are not in the source. Fixed them.
@vdboor Just curious, why the LF-to-CRLF solves? Are you on Windows platform?
@Iceberg: I used to be for the job I was in, but not anymore.
Pavel, the key to your answer was "The resultant text should look like a patch for the change you're committing." Easy to remember, and that's the part it's hard to remember, not "Press e to edit your hunk". :)

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