Windows command lines use double quotes to quote arguments with spaces.
This change is in a series to unify around using single quotes around
commands, and double quotes around interior arguments.
BEFORE:
$ hg revert
abort: no files or directories specified
(use --all to discard all changes)
AFTER:
$ hg revert
abort: no files or directories specified
(uncommitted merge, use --all to discard all changes, or 'hg update -C .' to abort the merge)
BEFORE:
$ hg revert
abort: no files or directories specified
(use --all to revert all files)
AFTER:
$ hg revert
abort: no files or directories specified
(use --all to discard all changes)
This reduces documentation confusion between the need to:
a) hg revert -a -r . (drop all changes from a merge)
b) hg up -C . (drop the second parent entirely)
Currently revert is one of two commands (the other being tag) that
still complains about uncommitted merges, dating from its former use
of a generic defaultrev function that aborted.