I've been using tig for years as just a git browser, but this video still showed me a load of things I hadn't realised it did (staging chunks, commiting those, direct command line access, configurable bindings). That means it does most of the stuff that magit does, whilst being somewhat easier to drive. So thanks very much for the informative vid.
@@BrodieRobertson yes, not super feature-packed, another thing you have probably seen and may be interested in is the Vim Reaper config (very good starting point for people to vim), its where I started, includes lazygit and lazydocker and much more, it is an entire config so might not be your thing, also great content :).
Would've been great if the keys were the same as those of the :G command of Tim Pope's vim fugitive plug-in. Edit: I just saw your comment about rebinding the shortcuts... So "it would've been great if default ones matched vim fugitive".
I've been using tig for years as just a git browser, but this video still showed me a load of things I hadn't realised it did (staging chunks, commiting those, direct command line access, configurable bindings). That means it does most of the stuff that magit does, whilst being somewhat easier to drive. So thanks very much for the informative vid.
Well I feel DUMM dumb. I've been using tig for basically ever but only ever used it as a super sweet git log application. Now fired up to do way more.
Gee, all this time I thought it was just an history browser :-D
I thought that when I first opened it up.
How does this stack up against LazyGit?
Young Brodie! You haven't changed in 2 years.
I hope my voice has at least become clearer
1:59 4:39 hmm, it doesn't show the executed command here, but nice that elsewhere it does like:
5:19 C, 5:37 !,
2:40 [, 4:10 G, 4:22 A,
How did you add the keypress overlay in the video?
ScreenKey is what I use, there might be others but this is my choice
dude, i just installed the other one...
This one has better bindings imo
Well I've got one more to cover and then I should be done with git interfaces for a while.
Thoughts on lazygit, it's my favorite
I'll be recording a video on that today but from my initial testing it'll be almost in the same tier as tig
@@BrodieRobertson yes, not super feature-packed, another thing you have probably seen and may be interested in is the Vim Reaper config (very good starting point for people to vim), its where I started, includes lazygit and lazydocker and much more, it is an entire config so might not be your thing, also great content :).
which os and theme are u using brother. Also great Video 👍👍
Arch Linux and all of my theming is custom
@@BrodieRobertson can we get video on it i searched through your channel but couldn't find it i really loved it.
I'll see what I can do
@@abdullah__patni Search how to setup bspwm and polybar in youtube, then go to polybar's github to learn how to customize the top bar
Would love to see a video on lazygit
It will be out in a few days.
Would've been great if the keys were the same as those of the :G command of Tim Pope's vim fugitive plug-in.
Edit: I just saw your comment about rebinding the shortcuts... So "it would've been great if default ones matched vim fugitive".
There's no reason why you can't rebind them, that's something I show towards the end of the video.
It’s easier for me to just use command line
I've started to appreciate git interfaces after doing these videos but I think I'll still continue to do stuff directly from the command line as well.
@Weekend Warrior to each his own, you need a better keyboard if you get blisters 😆
@Weekend Warrior tbh I just like mechanical keyboards 😜
@Weekend Warrior yeah you could say that. It's a scary obsession to a degree. I would never use a basic keyboard again unless it's no other option
hey @weekendwarrior3420 what's mc ?
> _"mc is far superior to getting blisters typing "cd" and "ls" commands"_
tig is git spelled backwards..........noice
It's certainly not the most creative name
@@BrodieRobertson i mean it kinda is creative
This is just a cheap version magit
Not having a dependency on emacs is nice