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(diff.info)Overview


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Overview
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   Computer users often find occasion to ask how two files differ.
Perhaps one file is a newer version of the other file.  Or maybe the
two files started out as identical copies but were changed by different
people.

   You can use the `diff' command to show differences between two
files, or each corresponding file in two directories.  `diff' outputs
differences between files line by line in any of several formats,
selectable by command line options.  This set of differences is often
called a "diff" or "patch".  For files that are identical, `diff'
normally produces no output; for binary (non-text) files, `diff'
normally reports only that they are different.

   You can use the `cmp' command to show the byte numbers and line
numbers where two files differ.  `cmp' can also show all the characters
that differ between the two files, side by side.  Another way to compare
two files character by character is the Emacs command `M-x
compare-windows'.  Note: Other Window, for more
information on that command.

   You can use the `diff3' command to show differences among three
files.  When two people have made independent changes to a common
original, `diff3' can report the differences between the original and
the two changed versions, and can produce a merged file that contains
both persons' changes together with warnings about conflicts.

   You can use the `sdiff' command to merge two files interactively.

   You can use the set of differences produced by `diff' to distribute
updates to text files (such as program source code) to other people.
This method is especially useful when the differences are small compared
to the complete files.  Given `diff' output, you can use the `patch'
program to update, or "patch", a copy of the file.  If you think of
`diff' as subtracting one file from another to produce their
difference, you can think of `patch' as adding the difference to one
file to reproduce the other.

   This manual first concentrates on making diffs, and later shows how
to use diffs to update files.

   GNU `diff' was written by Mike Haertel, David Hayes, Richard
Stallman, Len Tower, and Paul Eggert.  Wayne Davison designed and
implemented the unified output format.  The basic algorithm is described
in "An O(ND) Difference Algorithm and its Variations", Eugene W. Myers,
`Algorithmica' Vol. 1 No. 2, 1986, pp. 251-266; and in "A File
Comparison Program", Webb Miller and Eugene W. Myers,
`Software--Practice and Experience' Vol. 15 No. 11, 1985, pp. 1025-1040.
The algorithm was independently discovered as described in "Algorithms
for Approximate String Matching", E. Ukkonen, `Information and Control'
Vol. 64, 1985, pp. 100-118.

   GNU `diff3' was written by Randy Smith.  GNU `sdiff' was written by
Thomas Lord.  GNU `cmp' was written by Torbjorn Granlund and David
MacKenzie.

   `patch' was written mainly by Larry Wall; the GNU enhancements were
written mainly by Wayne Davison and David MacKenzie.  Parts of this
manual are adapted from a manual page written by Larry Wall, with his
permission.


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