Oooo exciting, I'm gonna have to give this a shot! I'll admit on first glance I thought this post was referring to (the very similar named) Sublimerge which is a pretty solid visual diff/merge...
Oooo exciting, I'm gonna have to give this a shot! I'll admit on first glance I thought this post was referring to (the very similar named) Sublimerge which is a pretty solid visual diff/merge plugin for Sublime already (the free version is diff-only, I believe) but can be a bit of a bear on larger files on my puny little chromebook. This looks pretty snappy (and fully featured for the free edition).
I guess my only reservation is it looks like you'll need an entirely separate window open just to support your git work (I suppose you could argue having the terminal open does this anyways, but still...)
edit: that highlight-able stage-hunk bit in the demo sold me, no more fiddling with +/-/' ' to stage hunks properly :)
Based on the name, I assumed this would be some sort of visual diff/merge tool (a la Kaleidoscope, which, despite the plethora of terminal-based visual differs out there, I still find myself...
Based on the name, I assumed this would be some sort of visual diff/merge tool (a la Kaleidoscope, which, despite the plethora of terminal-based visual differs out there, I still find myself reaching for from time to time). Still, interesting to see GUI git clients (and more interesting that they have their own custom git implementation for reading repositories), even if closed source. I find git’s command line to be more comfortable because I often have to use git on remote machines where I can’t rely on a GUI, though, so I can’t see myself using this.
I'm going to try it out, I'd been using Gitkraken for a while and it's been getting better. But it keeps having instabilities which are really disruptive to the workflow and often force me to just...
I'm going to try it out, I'd been using Gitkraken for a while and it's been getting better. But it keeps having instabilities which are really disruptive to the workflow and often force me to just go via CLI anyways.
EDIT: within one minute of downloading and installing it it's telling me I need a 99$ license just to switch to a dark theme (which is already installed). I didn't read the blog post, so it's partially on me, but no thank you.
Still not open source, I wish it was. Also I don't like the take on the free trial for this one. Forced light theme? Meh, I'll just wait until the pastebins full of keys come out. Not like I...
Still not open source, I wish it was. Also I don't like the take on the free trial for this one. Forced light theme? Meh, I'll just wait until the pastebins full of keys come out. Not like I wouldn't buy it, but still.
Oooo exciting, I'm gonna have to give this a shot! I'll admit on first glance I thought this post was referring to (the very similar named) Sublimerge which is a pretty solid visual diff/merge plugin for Sublime already (the free version is diff-only, I believe) but can be a bit of a bear on larger files on my puny little chromebook. This looks pretty snappy (and fully featured for the free edition).
I guess my only reservation is it looks like you'll need an entirely separate window open just to support your git work (I suppose you could argue having the terminal open does this anyways, but still...)
edit: that highlight-able stage-hunk bit in the demo sold me, no more fiddling with +/-/' ' to stage hunks properly :)
edit2: 16 MB install as well? nice.
Based on the name, I assumed this would be some sort of visual diff/merge tool (a la Kaleidoscope, which, despite the plethora of terminal-based visual differs out there, I still find myself reaching for from time to time). Still, interesting to see GUI
git
clients (and more interesting that they have their own custom git implementation for reading repositories), even if closed source. I findgit
’s command line to be more comfortable because I often have to usegit
on remote machines where I can’t rely on a GUI, though, so I can’t see myself using this.I'm going to try it out, I'd been using Gitkraken for a while and it's been getting better. But it keeps having instabilities which are really disruptive to the workflow and often force me to just go via CLI anyways.
EDIT: within one minute of downloading and installing it it's telling me I need a 99$ license just to switch to a dark theme (which is already installed). I didn't read the blog post, so it's partially on me, but no thank you.
Still not open source, I wish it was. Also I don't like the take on the free trial for this one. Forced light theme? Meh, I'll just wait until the pastebins full of keys come out. Not like I wouldn't buy it, but still.