Documentation: clarify that -h alone stands for help

We seem to be getting new users who get confused every 20 months or
so with this "-h consistently wants to give help, but the commands
to which `-h` may feel like a good short-form option want it to mean
something else." compromise.

Let's make sure that the readers know that `git cmd -h` (with no
other arguments) is a way to get usage text, even for commands like
ls-remote and grep.

Also extend the description that is already in gitcli.txt, as it is
clear that users still get confused with the current text.

Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is contained in:
Junio C Hamano 2020-02-27 08:10:20 -08:00
parent 4cd1cf31ef
commit 1ff466c018
2 changed files with 8 additions and 1 deletions

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@ -28,7 +28,9 @@ OPTIONS
Limit to only refs/heads and refs/tags, respectively.
These options are _not_ mutually exclusive; when given
both, references stored in refs/heads and refs/tags are
displayed.
displayed. Note that `git ls-remote -h` used without
anything else on the command line gives help, consistent
with other git subcommands.
--refs::
Do not show peeled tags or pseudorefs like HEAD in the output.

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@ -120,6 +120,11 @@ usage: git describe [<options>] <commit-ish>*
--long always use long format
--abbrev[=<n>] use <n> digits to display SHA-1s
---------------------------------------------
+
Note that some subcommand (e.g. `git grep`) may behave differently
when there are things on the command line other than `-h`, but `git
subcmd -h` without anything else on the command line is meant to
consistently give the usage.
--help-all::
Some Git commands take options that are only used for plumbing or that