Gitui is a terminal-based git user interface (TUI) that will change the way that you work with git. I have been a long-time user of the git cli, and it's been hard to beat, mostly because there is nothing that keeps my fingers on the keyboard quite like it, except gitui
which comes with some great ways to very
quickly walk through a git project.
installation
Go to their [releases]github.com/extrawurst/gitui/releases) page, download the latest build, and pop it on your PATH. I have the following stuffed away in some install scripts to get the latest version.
install latest release
GITUI_VERSION=$(curl --silent https://github.com/extrawurst/gitui/releases/latest | tr -d '"' | sed 's/^.*tag\///g' | sed 's/>.*$//g' | sed 's/^v//')
wget https://github.com/extrawurst/gitui/releases/download/v${GITUI_VERSION}/gitui-linux-musl.tar.gz -O- -q | sudo tar -zxf - -C /usr/bin/
run gitui
It opens blazing fast.
gitui
Quick Commits
Sometimes I edit a number of files and want to commit them one at a time, this is painful in the git cli and my main use case for gitui
. gitui
shows unstaged changes at the top, staged changes on the bottom, and a diff on the right.
Navigate with hjkl
By default, gitui
uses arrow keys, but simply copying vim_style_key_config.ron to your config directory will get you vim-like keybindings.
workflow
Generally, I pop open gitui
, use j/k to get to the file I want to commit, glance at the diff to the right, press enter to stage the file, sc to switch focus to the saged files and commit, write my commit message hit enter and done.
- w/s: to toggle focus between working and staged changes
- j/k: to scroll each section
- h/l: switch between left and right side
- enter: toggle file from working or staging
- c: start a commit message
- p: push
- : quit
Other Panes
I am in the Status [1]
pane 90% of the time, but it also has three other panes for Log [2]
, Stashing [3]
, and Stashes [4]
. I do not really use the stashes panes, but the Log [2]
pane is quite useful to quickly go through the last set of commits and see the diff for each of them.
What UI do you use for git
Let me know what ui you use for git, do you stick to the cli, use a gui, or use a similar TUI
interface?