How to get diff working like git-diff?
I like the output formatting of git diff
. The color and the +
/-
representation of changes between lines is easier to r开发者_Python百科ead than GNU diff.
I can run git diff
using --no-index
flag outside of a git repo and it works fine. However, it appears to be missing the --exclude
option for excluding files or subdirectories from a recursive diff
.
Is there a way to get the best of both worlds? (color options and +
/-
format of git diff
and --exclude
option of GNU diff).
I've experimented with colordiff
, but I still prefer the output format of git diff
This will do the +/-
rather than <
and >
.
diff -u file1 file2
Since GNU diffutils 3.4 the flag --color
has been added. Combining both makes the following:
diff --color -u file1 file2
The flag --color
also takes an argument, valid options are never
, always
, or auto
. Useful when you want to be more explicit on what needs to be done.
You can also use git diff --no-index -- A B
(via manpage).
Install colordiff.
Update your ~/.colordiffrc (copying /etc/colordiffrc first, if necessary):
# be more git-like: plain=off newtext=darkgreen oldtext=darkred diffstuff=darkcyan
Use
colordiff -u file1 file2
for two files orcolordiff -ruN path1 path2
for recursively comparing paths.
It's not exactly the same, but it's very close.
This is what I suggest and it's pretty close
diff -u FILE1 FILE2 | colordiff | less -R
colordiff
: You'll have to install thisbrew install colordiff
on my Mac.port install colordiff
on some Macs.sudo apt-get install colordiff
on Debian or Ubuntu- For other platforms, download the source from the main page or GitHub and follow the installation instructions
-R
: this tells Less to show colors instead of the raw codes.
I ultimately used -w
because I didn't want to see whitespace diffs.
diff -w -u FILE1 FILE2 | colordiff | less -R
Edit: As suggested by @Ciprian Tomoiaga in the comment, you can make this a function and put it in your ~/.bashrc
file too.
function gdiff () { diff -u $@ | colordiff | less -R; }
GNU diff
has a --color
option since version 3.4 in late 2016 according to this answer on the Unix SE. That alongside -u
should be enough to mimic the output of git diff
:
diff -u --color=always file1 file2 | less -r
--color
must be always
when used in a pipe, auto
will turn off color in pipes.
I've only tried this with Git Bash on Windows, where less -R
would only color the first line of a hunk. less -r
fixed it for me in that case.
Using only bash
, diff
, tput
, and less
, we can closely approximate the output of git diff
. There will be some notable differences, though, due to the short-sightedness of the diff
programmers.
Put the following Bash function definition in some file that gets sourced automatically by your user account, and you'll be able to access the function from the command line:
function gdiff()
{
local REG=`tput op`
local GRP=`tput setaf 6`
local ADD=`tput setaf 2`
local REM=`tput setaf 1`
local NL=$'\n'
local GRP_LABEL="${GRP}@@ %df,%dn +%dF,%dN @@${REG}"
local UNCH_GRP_FMT=''
[[ "${1}" == '@full' ]] && {
UNCH_GRP_FMT="${GRP_LABEL}${NL}%="
shift
}
diff \
--new-line-format="${ADD}+%L${REG}" \
--old-line-format="${REM}-%L${REG}" \
--unchanged-line-format=" %L${REG}" \
--new-group-format="${GRP_LABEL}${NL}%>" \
--old-group-format="${GRP_LABEL}${NL}%<" \
--changed-group-format="${GRP_LABEL}${NL}%<%>" \
--unchanged-group-format="${UNCH_GRP_FMT}" \
"${@}" | less -FXR
}
This function works as follows:
- Ultimately,
diff
gets invoked with various formatting options to specify how changes within the files will be displayed. tput
is used to insert ANSI color codes into those formatting options. Note that when using non-ANSI terminals, you may have to replacetput setaf
withtput setf
.- The output of
diff
is piped intoless
.-R
allows ANSI colors to be preserved.-X
preventsless
from clearing the screen upon exiting.-F
preventsless
from operating as a pager if the output fits within one screen. - If the first parameter is
@full
, the function will display all unchanged lines in addition to added and removed lines.
Note the following differences between this approach and git diff
:
git diff
reports three lines of context surrounding each change. Unfortunately,diff
seems to complain and exit if you want to specify the number of context lines while also simultaneously specifying formatting options. (At least it does in Mac OS X Yosemite). Thanksdiff
programmers. Therefore, you can either request no lines of context surrounding each change, which is the default behavior, or you can request that all unchanged lines within the file are also reported, by specifying@full
as the first parameter.- Because the lines of context are different from
git diff
, the line numbers reported by this function will also vary from those reported bygit diff
. - You may see the presence of single-line changes reported, which is the correct behavior, but annoying when your changed file contains the insertion of single empty lines. I think
git diff
deals with this better, via its lines of context. You could try passing different options todiff
to better deal with whitespace, if you prefer.
Place this in your rc file, most commonly it would be either .bashrc
or .zshrc
:
diff() { git diff --no-index "$1" "$2" | colordiff; }
requirements : git
and colordiff
should have been installed.
usage : diff file1 file2
You are looking for colordiff
:
sudo apt-get install colordiff
If you don't have colordiff
or git diff
, you can get color by vim
.
cdiff() { diff -u $@ | vim -R -; }
or simply
cdiff() { diff -u $@ | view -; }
Since bat has nice colorizing, I've tested if that works with diff
too and surprisingly it worked really well out of the box.
$ diff file1 file2 | bat
or $ diff -u file1 file2 | bat
So I suppose you could make a function like this below to be more efficient:
function bdiff () { diff -u $@ | bat;}
Tested in debian 9
diff -u --color=always file1 file2
The other option is to do it from outside the repository so git knows to diff between files. eg. a shell function something like:
gdiff() {
(
dir=`pwd`
cd ./$(git rev-parse --show-cdup)/..
git diff $dir/$1 $dir/$2
)
}
Use colordiff:
Installation:
sudo apt-get install colordiff
Usage:
colordiff -u file_one file_two
Gives exactly same difference as shown by git diff
.
add
alias diff="git diff --no-index --"
to ~/.zshrc or ~/.bashrc
This uses git diff to do ordinary diff between two files
I think the config setting :
[color]
ui = true
combined with "diff" command's --relative=<path>
option would do what you wanted. Did you try ?
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