← Back to context Comment by aoeuhtns 7 years ago Magit in emacs. Probably one of the killer applications for emacs. 8 comments aoeuhtns Reply karmajunkie 7 years ago +1, along with Tig (console gui). menacingly 7 years ago Thanks for telling me about tig, now I'm justified for having browsed HN today.It treats my "assume everything works like vim" habit well alunaryak 7 years ago tig is great -- it makes it very easy to stage individual lines of code (using 1) or to reset unstaged changes on a file (using ! in the status view). 1 reply → bradyholt 7 years ago I love tig! celeritascelery 7 years ago Agreed. Best git interface I have ever used. monsieurbanana 7 years ago I'd hesitate to call Magit a git GUI though.If we take Ranger for example, who calls itself the "CLI file manager", then Magit is rather a "git CLI". gumby 7 years ago >I'd hesitate to call Magit a git GUI though.Why? It is designed for git and graphically displays revisions allowing you to pick and chose chunks of file and to revert individual changes.
karmajunkie 7 years ago +1, along with Tig (console gui). menacingly 7 years ago Thanks for telling me about tig, now I'm justified for having browsed HN today.It treats my "assume everything works like vim" habit well alunaryak 7 years ago tig is great -- it makes it very easy to stage individual lines of code (using 1) or to reset unstaged changes on a file (using ! in the status view). 1 reply → bradyholt 7 years ago I love tig!
menacingly 7 years ago Thanks for telling me about tig, now I'm justified for having browsed HN today.It treats my "assume everything works like vim" habit well alunaryak 7 years ago tig is great -- it makes it very easy to stage individual lines of code (using 1) or to reset unstaged changes on a file (using ! in the status view). 1 reply →
alunaryak 7 years ago tig is great -- it makes it very easy to stage individual lines of code (using 1) or to reset unstaged changes on a file (using ! in the status view). 1 reply →
monsieurbanana 7 years ago I'd hesitate to call Magit a git GUI though.If we take Ranger for example, who calls itself the "CLI file manager", then Magit is rather a "git CLI". gumby 7 years ago >I'd hesitate to call Magit a git GUI though.Why? It is designed for git and graphically displays revisions allowing you to pick and chose chunks of file and to revert individual changes.
gumby 7 years ago >I'd hesitate to call Magit a git GUI though.Why? It is designed for git and graphically displays revisions allowing you to pick and chose chunks of file and to revert individual changes.
+1, along with Tig (console gui).
Thanks for telling me about tig, now I'm justified for having browsed HN today.
It treats my "assume everything works like vim" habit well
tig is great -- it makes it very easy to stage individual lines of code (using 1) or to reset unstaged changes on a file (using ! in the status view).
1 reply →
I love tig!
Agreed. Best git interface I have ever used.
I'd hesitate to call Magit a git GUI though.
If we take Ranger for example, who calls itself the "CLI file manager", then Magit is rather a "git CLI".
>I'd hesitate to call Magit a git GUI though.
Why? It is designed for git and graphically displays revisions allowing you to pick and chose chunks of file and to revert individual changes.