sometimes, on windows, I `git add .` in a legacy project where having exactly what is present in the filesystem is actually primordial. sometimes, that's long, because git will list warnings for bad line endings for each file, which can be crippingly long. I,m trying to find windows equivalents for `> /dev/null` but the readily available `> NUL` or `> nul` (in case these are different) return `out-file : FileStream was asked to open a device that was not a file.`.
so. how's one supposed to ignore a command's output on windows. or, alternatively, is there a way to instruct git not to whine …
so. how's one supposed to ignore a command's output on windows. or, alternatively, is there a way to instruct git not to whine …