I ask because I like console, but at the same time have difficulties remembering all the commands. I’d like to try a GUI that is comfortable to use with only a keyboard.
[edit]
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  • Da_Boom@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    1 year ago

    I don’t use a GUI, with the exception of Meld as my primary difftool

    At work I wish they were using git. But we got SVN. How I long for the ability to use pull requests. But tortoiseSVN has some nice features (I’m stuck with windows over there) even if it’s lacking in overall functionality.

  • sznio@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I use the VS Code built-in git support for making commits, and fall back to the CLI for anything else.

    You won’t have trouble remembering commands once you use them often enough. And you don’t need to know all of them, just the ones your workflow uses. My toolbox is commit, checkout, status, reset, rebase -i, merge, bisect. That’s all I need day-to-day.

  • davehtaylor@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I have some git blame extention in VSCode, but otherwise no. Something about using gui tool for git makes me feel so disconnected from it, like I’m not entirely sure what’s going on, and afraid I’m going to fuck something up

    Also, I forget commands all the time. Mostly ones I don’t use often, like changing/adding/removing remotes, changing settings, etc.

  • s_w@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I use IntelliJ’s built-in git GUI.

    I don’t understand why people use command line only. Sure, learn the commands so if you need to use them you can, but most GUIs are far more feature rich than command line. With IntelliJ, I can easily view differences before committing, have it do code quality scans, automatically clean up any code it can, more easily choose which files I want to commit vs the typical ‘git add .’ I see most people do with command line, have separate changelists when pair programming, and much more.

    One argument that continually comes up is that command line is faster. I completely disagree. If I want to just commit the code without reviewing it, I can use 2 hot keys and the code is committed and pushed. But as I do a quick readthrough of all the code first and review issues from the code quality analysis it does take more time, but still less than it would to do comparable things with command line.

    • dbanty@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      The IntelliJ merge UI is the only way I ever want to deal with merge conflicts. So much better than any of the alternatives I’ve tried!

    • pinkpatrol@anarch.is
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      1 year ago

      I’m a heavy intellij user, but the git log UI always confuses me. When I open ‘git log’ via the action menu IntelliJ doesn’t focus my current branch. I am not sure if there’s some other menu I’m supposed to use to achieve that.

      I do use the commit local changes, pull changes, merge branches functionality a good bit. My only feedback there is that I haven’t found a way to quickly commit changes without running git hooks. Each time it requires me to open up the gear icon and deselect ‘git hooks’. This is slower than using the command line where I can write git commit --no-verify and repeat the same command again and again. I know it’s a niche need, but it’s necessary for testing a rather archaic system we maintain.

  • Cass.Forest@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Since I work in Linux and primarily code in languages like C and C++ (i.e. compiled langs), I work completely in the terminal, so I don’t use any GUI. It’s nice and I’m already there for my compiling so I might as well use it for git.

    However, re remembering all the commands, there is a nifty website I found a while ago and bookmarked called Git Explorer where you basically choose from dropdowns of what you want to do and it gives you the command(s) for it.

  • thepaperpilot@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I use sublime merge because I really like ST and want to further support the dev. I wish it had more integrations with github (and theoretically github alternatives), but I understand the reasoning not to. Before SM came out I just used the command line exclusively.

    • pkulak@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I never use Sublime Text, but I love Sublime Merge. I dunno why. Something about the UI just works for my brain, and the merge UI is amazing. I only ever open it with smerge . in a directory, and it’s set to floating in my window manager so it pops up, I do my thing, and it goes away.

  • shaggy@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I use SourceTree regularly, but when shit hits the fan, I always fall back to the terminal.

  • qevlarr@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    SourceTree when I was still a software engineer.

    I’m a manager now, and I see people insisting on command line who have no idea what they’re doing. Then don’t! I think it’s an awful attitude that real programmers use git command line, and GUIs are for babies. Please call out this attitude whenever you see it. Use tools that work for you. Git has a terrible user experience, let’s face it.

  • hunte@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Since I use Emacs I’ve been really happy with Magit, even tho it’s UI has a bit of a learning curve to it. I’ve been also trying out Gitg since I moved back to GNOME and it’s been really solid as well. It lacks a couple really nieche features but otherwise as a fast commit tracking/writing tool it’s very good.

  • exu@feditown.com
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    1 year ago

    Magit with emacs (doom emacs to be fully honest). More a TUI, but definitely fully keyboard driven :)

  • Djoot@feddit.dk
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    1 year ago

    Lazygit changed how I use git, it is so easy to do all the daily essentials like branching, committing, and merging, but also also does more advanced things like interactive rebasing when needed.

    I had searched for a proper git client, that was free and open source plus worked on both Linux and Windows, for a long time and I haven’t looked back after finding lazygit.

  • Chrissie@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    Developing in a Windows environment, I generally prefer Git Extensions.
    It doesn’t distract the eye with unneeded fancy and is very close to a command line git experience but still allows me a better visual sense of the repository and branches.

  • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I use various extensions for Visual Studio Code. They add a million features, but these are the ones I find most useful:

    I prefer to view the current status of my checkout in the sidebar of my code editor than on the command line.

    It’s easier to view a diff of a file and decide whether to stage or rollback changes in a GUI. With most GUIs you can even select individual lines of code and revert or stage them.

    I like how Commit and Push and Pull are a single “Commit & Sync” button in Visual Studio code. Similarly there’s a simple “Sync” button in the status bar.

    Speaking of the status bar - it also has a counter for commits that need to be pushed or pulled. And it tells you what branch you’re currently on. And whether you have uncommitted changes. Handy.

    I find the GUI equivalent of git log --graph is significantly easier to understand when the graph is drawn with nice vector lines instead of ASCII art.

    Finally - I don’t just use raw git, I also use extensions like pull requests, and I create branches for issue numbers. I have an extension that shows pull requests in Visual Studio Code and also shows issues assigned to me, with a one click “Start Working” button to create a branch named after the issue and change the issue status to In Progress. And when I’m finished working on it, there’s a button for that too.