I would like to post-process diff output and then pass the results to a graphical viewer, such as kdiff3 or xxdiff. If possible, I would like to be able to highlight in-line differences using different colors.
3 Answers
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+1 I love this software. But since the OP is using diff he's probably on linux.– gsgxCommented May 31, 2012 at 13:17
Perhaps this is not what you're looking for exactly, but you can do this in using vim:
vimdiff file1 file2 file3
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a command line solution: stackoverflow.com/questions/8800578/…– XoXoCommented Sep 27, 2019 at 18:39
For highlighting, try colordiff or highlight, with the --syntax=diff
argument; however, you don't need those with a graphical diff viewer as those have their own highlighters, so you should be able to just use a graphical diff viewer normally. The aforementioned [meld][http://meldmerge.org/] is one such tool, and you apparently already know about kdiff3.
If you're diffing non-files (e.g. <(command args...)
subshell FIFOs in bash), all you need to do is redirect the non-files' content into files and run the graphical tool on that.