+ # There is a special situation to take care of. Consider this hunk:
+ #
+ # @@ -10,4 +10,4 @@
+ # context before
+ # -old 1
+ # -old 2
+ # +new 1
+ # +new 2
+ # context after
+ #
+ # We used to keep the context lines in the order they appear in the
+ # hunk. But then it is not possible to correctly stage only
+ # "-old 1" and "+new 1" - it would result in this staged text:
+ #
+ # context before
+ # old 2
+ # new 1
+ # context after
+ #
+ # (By symmetry it is not possible to *un*stage "old 2" and "new 2".)
+ #
+ # We resolve the problem by introducing an asymmetry, namely, when
+ # a "+" line is *staged*, it is moved in front of the context lines
+ # that are generated from the "-" lines that are immediately before
+ # the "+" block. That is, we construct this patch:
+ #
+ # @@ -10,4 +10,5 @@
+ # context before
+ # +new 1
+ # old 1
+ # old 2
+ # context after
+ #
+ # But we do *not* treat "-" lines that are *un*staged in a special
+ # way.
+ #
+ # With this asymmetry it is possible to stage the change
+ # "old 1" -> "new 1" directly, and to stage the change
+ # "old 2" -> "new 2" by first staging the entire hunk and
+ # then unstaging the change "old 1" -> "new 1".
+
+ # This is non-empty if and only if we are _staging_ changes;
+ # then it accumulates the consecutive "-" lines (after converting
+ # them to context lines) in order to be moved after the "+" change
+ # line.
+ set pre_context {}
+