I have a small scripting project that consists of five different source files in one directory called "Droid XX-XX-XX". Each time I created a new backup copy of the source directory, I put the date in the X's. So there are about 15 different versions from different dates. I want to add each of these to my bare new Git repository starting from the earliest.
However I have run into several problems.
One problem is that some of the files use tabs for indentation, while others use spaces -- but Git treats a whole line as different even when the only difference is the tab vs. space issue. How can I make Git ignore indentation formatting?
Another problem is that some filenames would have no spaces while others had spaces between the words -- but Git treats them as different files. Worse, sometimes the filename was changed to something different (like "PatrolPlan" changed to just "Patrol") for no real reason. When I'm adding a new set of files, how can I tell Git that even though the filename is different, it's really just a new version of a certain older file? Or better yet, can I set it to auto-detect when this happens?
The last problem is that at certain points during development, we merged two source files into one, or split one into two -- but Git doesn't automatically detect the similarities and deduce what happened. How can I tell Git what happened? Or better yet, how can I set it to auto-detect when two source files were combined or when one was split up?
I realize questions (2) and (3) are highly related. Thanks for any assistance!
git mv
the files that changed their name and then copy from the new version over them. Same thing with number 3 and I believegit
would automatically figure out what happened to the code.