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[[!comment format=mdwn
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username="joey"
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subject="""comment 7"""
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date="2022-08-24T19:01:55Z"
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content="""
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I do think there is value in the simplicity of the current json, even if a
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"better" one could be constructed if we did not need to worry about
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backwards compatability. A new JSON object that was only seen when
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recursing a directory would need to be documented, otherwise a JSON user
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would be likely to only implement support for the JSON objects they did see.
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"""]]
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[[!comment format=mdwn
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username="joey"
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subject="""re: comment 5"""
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date="2022-08-24T19:06:20Z"
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content="""
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git-annex uses git plumbing to handle this, so it's easy to do very close
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to the same thing:
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For most git-annex commands except `add`, you can get a list of files
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with `git ls-files --cached`. That will include annexed files and other
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files, but of course commands like `drop` will skip the non-annexed files
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and that can be handled with the existing `--batch` interface.
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For `add`, use `git ls-files --others --exclude-standard`
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(For `add`, it also looks at `git ls-files --modified`, but you only need
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that if you want to add files that got modified.)
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"""]]
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