The above answers fail for some use cases where you need to exclude moved text (e.g., if I move a function in code or paragraph in latex further down the document, I don't want to count all of those as changes!)
For that, you can also calculate the number of duplicate lines, and exclude those from your query if there are too many duplicates.
For example, building on the other answers, I can do:
git diff $sha~1..$sha|grep -e"^+[^+]" -e"^-[^-]"|sed -e's/.//'|sort|uniq -d|wc -w|xargs
calculates the number of duplicate words in the diff, where sha
is your commit.
You can do this for all the commits within the last day (since 6 am) by:
for sha in $(git rev-list --since="6am" master | sed -e '$ d'); do
echo $(git diff --word-diff=porcelain $sha~1..$sha|grep -e"^+[^+]"|wc -w|xargs),\
$(git diff --word-diff=porcelain $sha~1..$sha|grep -e"^-[^-]"|wc -w|xargs),\
$(git diff $sha~1..$sha|grep -e"^+[^+]" -e"^-[^-]"|sed -e's/.//'|sort|uniq -d|wc -w|xargs)
done
Prints: added, deleted, duplicates
(I take the line diff for duplicates, as it excludes the times where git diff
tries to be too clever, and assumes you have actually just changed text rather than moved it. It also discounts instances where a single word is counted as a duplicate.)
Or, if you want to be sophisticated about it, you can exclude commits entirely if there is more than 80% duplication, and sum up the rest:
total=0
for sha in $(git rev-list --since="6am" master | sed -e '$ d'); do
added=$(git diff --word-diff=porcelain $sha~1..$sha|grep -e"^+[^+]"|wc -w|xargs)
deleted=$(git diff --word-diff=porcelain $sha~1..$sha|grep -e"^-[^-]"|wc -w|xargs)
duplicated=$(git diff $sha~1..$sha|grep -e"^+[^+]" -e"^-[^-]"|sed -e's/.//'|sort|uniq -d|wc -w|xargs)
if [ "$added" -eq "0" ]; then
changed=$deleted
total=$((total+deleted))
echo "added:" $added, "deleted:" $deleted, "duplicated:"\
$duplicated, "changed:" $changed
elif [ "$(echo "$duplicated/$added > 0.8" | bc -l)" -eq "1" ]; then
echo "added:" $added, "deleted:" $deleted, "duplicated:"\
$duplicated, "changes counted:" 0
else
changed=$((added+deleted))
total=$((total+changed))
echo "added:" $added, "deleted:" $deleted, "duplicated:"\
$duplicated, "changes counted:" $changed
fi
done
echo "Total changed:" $total
I have this script to do it here: https://github.com/MilesCranmer/git-stats.
This prints out:
➜ bifrost_paper git:(master) ✗ count_changed_words "6am"
added: 38, deleted: 76, duplicated: 3, changes counted: 114
added: 14, deleted: 19, duplicated: 0, changes counted: 33
added: 1113, deleted: 1112, duplicated: 1106, changes counted: 0
added: 1265, deleted: 1275, duplicated: 1225, changes counted: 0
added: 4207, deleted: 4208, duplicated: 4391, changes counted: 0
Total changed: 147
The commits where I am just moving around things are obvious, so I don't count those changes. It counts up everything else and tells me the total number of changed words.