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I am way more interested in a word-based diff.
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Easy to have. Even running latexdiff from git is not hard - if you work on a desktop machine exclusively.
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you probably want
@alerossini's solution?https://twitter.com/alerossini/status/773474371738464256 … -
I found wdiff to work better for editing. wdiff, Emacs and orgmode ftw!https://github.com/jkitchin/scimax/blob/master/org-editmarks.el#L434 …
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yeah but I need online collab most often with a compiler like overleaf... would this integrate?
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via "git push" it probably would ;) you would also need to adapt it from org to latex.
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not sure how that would help, what I need is an environment that allows stuff like concurrent...
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I disagree. You can avoid writing each sentence on a new line if you use git diff --color-words. https://git-scm.com/docs/git-diff
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super useful thanks but I so like to see it on github itself too sometimes
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interesting!!! cc:
@csmarcum@philipbstark@HamoudiAmar@kellieotto -
makes git diff less horrible
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it definitely does
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Or simply apply the standard rule of limiting line width at 80 chars.
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quite a few have mentioned this already
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For LateX % I separate sentences with a percent and keep them within a given column limit. % Works well for git :-)
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@SergeStinckwich and a different file per section.Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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