On Sat, Nov 17, 2007 at 12:42:51PM +0100, Nagy Gabor wrote:
And I think git add is only necessary for the untracked files : that is, new files that don't exist yet in the git repo, like new pactests. Well, then you are not familiar in git neither ;-) If I modify something, without git-add then git commit -s doesn't won't do anything. First you must tell git about the modified files (git-add -u for example). The thing I dunno, if this is needed more than once or not (I mean, what happens if I modify files after git-add) Bye
Oh, what I said might only apply to : git-commit -a -s . That should automatically add the tracked files that were modified. Hm yes, just checked the manpage :) -a|--all Tell the command to automatically stage files that have been modified and deleted, but new files you have not told git about are not affected.