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-rw-r--r--Documentation/gittutorial-2.txt18
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/gittutorial-2.txt b/Documentation/gittutorial-2.txt
index 2c5467057..f2624aa22 100644
--- a/Documentation/gittutorial-2.txt
+++ b/Documentation/gittutorial-2.txt
@@ -212,7 +212,7 @@ designate such an argument.
The index file
--------------
-The primary tool we've been using to create commits is "git commit
+The primary tool we've been using to create commits is "git-commit
-a", which creates a commit including every change you've made to
your working tree. But what if you want to commit changes only to
certain files? Or only certain changes to certain files?
@@ -255,7 +255,7 @@ index a042389..513feba 100644
+hello world, again
------------------------------------------------
-So "git diff" is comparing against something other than the head.
+So "git-diff" is comparing against something other than the head.
The thing that it's comparing against is actually the index file,
which is stored in .git/index in a binary format, but whose contents
we can examine with ls-files:
@@ -270,9 +270,9 @@ hello world!
hello world, again
------------------------------------------------
-So what our "git add" did was store a new blob and then put
+So what our "git-add" did was store a new blob and then put
a reference to it in the index file. If we modify the file again,
-we'll see that the new modifications are reflected in the "git diff"
+we'll see that the new modifications are reflected in the "git-diff"
output:
------------------------------------------------
@@ -287,7 +287,7 @@ index 513feba..ba3da7b 100644
+again?
------------------------------------------------
-With the right arguments, git diff can also show us the difference
+With the right arguments, git-diff can also show us the difference
between the working directory and the last commit, or between the
index and the last commit:
@@ -311,7 +311,7 @@ index a042389..513feba 100644
+hello world, again
------------------------------------------------
-At any time, we can create a new commit using "git commit" (without
+At any time, we can create a new commit using "git-commit" (without
the -a option), and verify that the state committed only includes the
changes stored in the index file, not the additional change that is
still only in our working tree:
@@ -329,11 +329,11 @@ index 513feba..ba3da7b 100644
+again?
------------------------------------------------
-So by default "git commit" uses the index to create the commit, not
+So by default "git-commit" uses the index to create the commit, not
the working tree; the -a option to commit tells it to first update
the index with all changes in the working tree.
-Finally, it's worth looking at the effect of "git add" on the index
+Finally, it's worth looking at the effect of "git-add" on the index
file:
------------------------------------------------
@@ -341,7 +341,7 @@ $ echo "goodbye, world" >closing.txt
$ git add closing.txt
------------------------------------------------
-The effect of the "git add" was to add one entry to the index file:
+The effect of the "git-add" was to add one entry to the index file:
------------------------------------------------
$ git ls-files --stage