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.gitattributes
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.gitattributes
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# Set the default behavior, in case people don't have core.autocrlf set.
# This is critical for Windows and UNIX interoperability.
* text=auto
# Explicitly declare text files you want to always be normalized and converted
# to native line endings on checkout.
*.c text
*.h text
*.md text
*.opam text
*.opam.template text
Makefile text
dune text
dune-project text
license-header.txt text
opam text
# Declare files that will always have LF line endings on checkout.
*.patch text eol=lf
*.sexp text eol=lf
*.sh text eol=lf
*.mli text eol=lf linguist-language=OCaml
*.ml text eol=lf linguist-language=OCaml
*.md text eol=lf
*.opam text eol=lf
*.opam.template text eol=lf
license-header.txt text eol=lf
# Declare files that will always have CRLF line endings on checkout.
*.sln text eol=crlf
# https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/microsoft.powershell.core/about/about_character_encoding?view=powershell-7.1
# > Creating PowerShell scripts on a Unix-like platform or using a cross-platform editor on Windows, such as Visual Studio Code,
# > results in a file encoded using UTF8NoBOM. These files work fine on PowerShell Core, but may break in Windows PowerShell if
# > the file contains non-Ascii characters.
# > In general, Windows PowerShell uses the Unicode UTF-16LE encoding by default.
# > Using any Unicode encoding, except UTF7, always creates a BOM.
#
# Hint: If a file is causing you problems (ex. `fatal: BOM is required in ... if encoded as UTF-16`) use
# "View > Change File Encoding > Save with Encoding > UTF-16LE" in Visual Studio Code to save the file correctly.
*.ps1 text working-tree-encoding=UTF-16 eol=crlf
*.psm1 text working-tree-encoding=UTF-16 eol=crlf