Say that we use unified diffs, and point to the Wikipedia article
about them. We should probably explain this in more detail ourselves
when we get a proper user guide; but for the tutorial, this is
probably enough.
Signed-off-by: Karl Hasselström <kha@treskal.com>
-(I'm assuming you're already familiar with patches like this from Git,
-but it's really quite simple; in this example, I've added the +$$print
-'My first patch!'$$+ line to the file +stgit/main.py+, at around line
-171.)
+(I'm assuming you're already familiar with
+htmllink:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diff#Unified_format[unified
+diff] patches like this from Git, but it's really quite simple; in
+this example, I've added the +$$print 'My first patch!'$$+ line to the
+file +stgit/main.py+, at around line 171.)
Since the patch is also a regular Git commit, you can also look at it
with regular Git tools such as manlink:gitk[].
Since the patch is also a regular Git commit, you can also look at it
with regular Git tools such as manlink:gitk[].