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author | Martin Ågren <martin.agren@gmail.com> | 2020-02-03 21:36:50 +0100 |
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committer | Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> | 2020-02-04 12:17:18 -0800 |
commit | e469afe158a9c8a4b2aa9a753f80d034a8fc7f05 (patch) | |
tree | 3034a469ba11f6263de732d28b496c8289838b00 | |
parent | .mailmap: map Yi-Jyun Pan's email (diff) | |
download | tgif-e469afe158a9c8a4b2aa9a753f80d034a8fc7f05.tar.xz |
git-filter-branch.txt: wrap "maths" notation in backticks
In this paragraph, we have a few instances of the '^' character, which
we give as "\^". This renders well with AsciiDoc ("^"), but Asciidoctor
renders it literally as "\^". Dropping the backslashes renders fine
with Asciidoctor, but not AsciiDoc...
An earlier version of this patch used "{caret}" instead of "^", which
avoided these escaping problems. The rendering was still so-so, though
-- these expressions end up set as normal text, similarly to when one
provides, e.g., computer code in the middle of running text, without
properly marking it with `backticks` to be monospaced.
As noted by Jeff King, this suggests actually wrapping these
expressions in backticks, setting them in monospace.
The lone "5" could be left as is or wrapped as `5`. Spell it out as
"five" instead -- this generally looks better anyway for small numbers
in the middle of text like this.
Suggested-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Martin Ågren <martin.agren@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt b/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt index a530fef7e5..40ba4aa3e6 100644 --- a/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt +++ b/Documentation/git-filter-branch.txt @@ -467,9 +467,9 @@ impossible for a backward-compatible implementation to ever be fast: * In editing files, git-filter-branch by design checks out each and every commit as it existed in the original repo. If your repo has - 10\^5 files and 10\^5 commits, but each commit only modifies 5 - files, then git-filter-branch will make you do 10\^10 modifications, - despite only having (at most) 5*10^5 unique blobs. + `10^5` files and `10^5` commits, but each commit only modifies five + files, then git-filter-branch will make you do `10^10` modifications, + despite only having (at most) `5*10^5` unique blobs. * If you try and cheat and try to make git-filter-branch only work on files modified in a commit, then two things happen |