diff3
Hunks
Groups of lines that differ in two or three of the input files are
called diff3 hunks, by analogy with diff
hunks
(see section Hunks). If all three input files differ in a diff3
hunk, the hunk is called a three-way hunk; if just two input files
differ, it is a two-way hunk.
As with diff
, several solutions are possible. When comparing the
files `A', `B', and `C', diff3
normally finds
diff3
hunks by merging the two-way hunks output by the two
commands `diff A B' and `diff A C'. This does not necessarily
minimize the size of the output, but exceptions should be rare.
For example, suppose `F' contains the three lines `a', `b', `f', `G' contains the lines `g', `b', `g', and `H' contains the lines `a', `b', `h'. `diff3 F G H' might output the following:
====2 1:1c 3:1c a 2:1c g ==== 1:3c f 2:3c g 3:3c h
because it found a two-way hunk containing `a' in the first and third files and `g' in the second file, then the single line `b' common to all three files, then a three-way hunk containing the last line of each file.