diff options
-rw-r--r-- | using-git.texinfo | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/using-git.texinfo b/using-git.texinfo index aa0eb5e..1458420 100644 --- a/using-git.texinfo +++ b/using-git.texinfo @@ -959,20 +959,20 @@ them unique identifier, this solves the problem were you in Git can get an evil merge if the pulled branch does not have -any common commits@footnote{Identified +any common commits.@footnote{Identified with commit ID, not snapshots, which reflects on more than the -file content.}, for example, +file content.} For example, the pull patch was not made from a clone repository or did not contain commit history. Other systems tracks renames explicitly when a rename command is made, -that is worst because than mean +that is worst because that means that you need to use the rename commit, and evil merges are even -more probable. A problem will -merging when where is a rename +more probable. A problem with +merging when there is a rename is that the changes are automerged instead of creating a conflict, you can get evil merges where |