• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    82 months ago

    Oh this is neat. I wonder if the license will accommodate my work (and my work is willing to allow a nonstandard diff)

    • @nous
      link
      English
      202 months ago

      The license is MIT, so should be fine for most things

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    52 months ago

    How does this compare with GumTree? It’s weird that the page doesn’t even mention existing state-of-the-art tools for this task.

  • astrsk
    link
    fedilink
    -12 months ago

    I didn’t get a chance to look too deep into it, while it looks great for human reading in a terminal, can I just as easily output the diff to a patch file like I do often with ‘git diff [commit] [commit] > patch.txt and git apply it?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      152 months ago

      Doesn’t look like it, from their docs:

      Non-goals

      Patching. Difftastic output is intended for human consumption, and it does not generate patches that you can apply later. Use diff if you need a patch.

    • @zygo_histo_morpheus
      link
      22 months ago

      Since the diffs are tree-sitter based, it’s interesting to think about what a tree-sitter based patch would look like. Probably wouldn’t double as a human and computer friendly format like normals diffs. I suppose that you could create patches that are more robust to the source code changing since it wouldn’t care about linebreaks and maybe you could have it so it doesn’t care if you move code around since you could have it so its going by e.g. what the parent function is and not the line number. I gotta wonder how useful that actually is though.