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git remove trailing whitespace in new files before commit

I know removing trailing whitespace can be done with a pre-commit hook. I am interested in doing it manually. I read the question here:
Make git automatically remove trailing whitespace before committing - Stack Overflow
The answer closest to what I want is the "automatic version" from ntc2:

(export VISUAL=: && git -c apply.whitespace=fix add -ue .) && git checkout . && git reset


That command works well except it seems to be only for changes on files that are already in the repo, not new files. I have a bunch of files that are new, meaning they aren't yet in the repo. I want to remove whitespace from those files so I tried add -A instead of -u but that didn't make a difference.

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To manually clean up whitespace from your last 3 commits, you can do this:

git rebase --whitespace=fix HEAD~3

When I work on a topic branch, I track the upstream branch (usually by creating it like this)

git checkout -b topic -t

Which allows me to drop the last argument from git rebase. So once I'm done & ready to merge, I can clean the whole topic branch quickly with:

git ws # aliased to rebase --whitespace=fix

Note that, unlike the HEAD~3 example, this will actually rebase your changes upon the upstream branch if it's changed! (But that's also what I want, in my workflow.)


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