You will see the base version on the left side and the current one on the right, just like we want it. Note that to use difftool, you need to have Git configured correctly to open WinMerge. To produce a patch that embodies my last three commits. You can do this manually or in a number of ways in Git, but in my case I used ![]() ![]() So, open both the versions of the source file in WinMerge, the one you want to be the target version to patch on the left and the current one on the right. This can be useful if you're not using something like Git in your workflow, or if, like me, Git just isn't working for you (in my case, a unix file being edited in windows resulted in a patch that replaced the entire source file). Today a colleague was a bit puzzled by how I generated a patch in WinMerge.
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