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Add 'human' date format documentation

Display date and time information in a format similar to how people
write dates in other contexts. If the year isn't specified then, the
reader infers the date is given is in the current year.

By not displaying the redundant information, the reader concentrates
on the information that is different. The patch reports relative dates
based on information inferred from the date on the machine running the
git command at the time the command is executed.

While the format is more useful to humans by dropping inferred
information, there is nothing that makes it actually human. If the
'relative' date format wasn't already implemented then using
'relative' would have been appropriate.

Signed-off-by: Stephen P. Smith <ischis2@cox.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
maint
Stephen P. Smith 6 years ago committed by Junio C Hamano
parent
commit
038a878810
  1. 4
      Documentation/git-log.txt
  2. 7
      Documentation/rev-list-options.txt

4
Documentation/git-log.txt

@ -192,6 +192,10 @@ log.date:: @@ -192,6 +192,10 @@ log.date::
Default format for human-readable dates. (Compare the
`--date` option.) Defaults to "default", which means to write
dates like `Sat May 8 19:35:34 2010 -0500`.
+
If the format is set to "auto:foo" and the pager is in use, format
"foo" will be the used for the date format. Otherwise "default" will
be used.

log.follow::
If `true`, `git log` will act as if the `--follow` option was used when

7
Documentation/rev-list-options.txt

@ -830,6 +830,13 @@ Note that the `-local` option does not affect the seconds-since-epoch @@ -830,6 +830,13 @@ Note that the `-local` option does not affect the seconds-since-epoch
value (which is always measured in UTC), but does switch the accompanying
timezone value.
+
`--date=human` shows the timezone if the timezone does not match the
current time-zone, and doesn't print the whole date if that matches
(ie skip printing year for dates that are "this year", but also skip
the whole date itself if it's in the last few days and we can just say
what weekday it was). For older dates the hour and minute is also
omitted.
+
`--date=unix` shows the date as a Unix epoch timestamp (seconds since
1970). As with `--raw`, this is always in UTC and therefore `-local`
has no effect.

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