8 votes

Topic deleted by author

4 comments

  1. [2]
    demifiend
    Link
    It looks cool, and I could probably port it to OpenBSD easily enough if all I need is golang and gocui, but I manage just fine with raw git commands in a terminal.

    It looks cool, and I could probably port it to OpenBSD easily enough if all I need is golang and gocui, but I manage just fine with raw git commands in a terminal.

    4 votes
    1. aphoenix
      Link Parent
      I'm in the same boat. I do about half my git-ing inside my IDE now (conditional per line commits using PyCharm are fantastic) and if I head to the CLI it's to un-fuck something that I can't really...

      I'm in the same boat.

      I do about half my git-ing inside my IDE now (conditional per line commits using PyCharm are fantastic) and if I head to the CLI it's to un-fuck something that I can't really do with a UI.

      It still looks pretty cool.

      I want to want this more than I do.

      2 votes
  2. [2]
    Luca
    Link
    What's the incentive to use this if I'm already proficient in git? No sarcasm or anything in the question. I learned git by using the command line, and I never felt the need for a 'real' UI. What...

    What's the incentive to use this if I'm already proficient in git?

    No sarcasm or anything in the question. I learned git by using the command line, and I never felt the need for a 'real' UI. What can this offer that just using git commands doesn't?

    3 votes
    1. clone1
      Link Parent
      You probably don't have any reason to use this; I wouldn't imagine that this is aimed for people proficient in git. It's meant for people who find the git commands hard to use and unwieldy, but...

      You probably don't have any reason to use this; I wouldn't imagine that this is aimed for people proficient in git. It's meant for people who find the git commands hard to use and unwieldy, but don't want a full fledged desktop client.

      8 votes