On 22/12/11 22:37, Ryan Lane wrote:
Green has a meaning of "Go" or of "this
is ok" in many cultures.
Making either side green gives a bias to the diff. Similarly with red.
Red means "Stop" or "this is not ok". Many people associate red with
blood, and green with nature.
- Ryan
I don't see why that becomes a problem. I mean, unified diffs have +
before new lines and - before deleted ones. Change control of certain
popular text editor uses red for the changed text (both removed and added).
A revision is a change the author did. If the old, red text was good,
and the green new one is wrong, then it is a "lie", and should be reverted.