On Tue, Oct 27, 2015 at 7:09 AM, Jérôme Reybert <jreybert@gmail.com> wrote:
> Believe it or not, but emacs has an excellent plugin ;) . This is an interface to git, a plugin named Magit[1]. Its creator designed a unique and really efficient workflow with git. IMO, Magit is more than just a plugin to use git within an editor, this is a new way to use git.
>
> I felt very frustrated during two years, stuck with git gui (or git add -p ?!), although my officemate staged like crazy with Magit. Actually, before he showed me Magit, I was quite happy with what I had. But once I discovered Magit, that was too late. Then, I had two choices, start using emacs, or develop a Magit-like interface for vim. I chose the latter!
>
>> But hey, Tim Pope himself created fugitive, what's wrong with you?
>
> I do not blame fugitive quality, this is a very good plugin. But I don't like much what fugitive offers for staging. As long as your changes belong to one file,
> :Gstatus<CR>do]cdo]c]cdo:w^WkC
> does the job. But if you have changes among multiple files, visualize them globally and stage some of them is a pain to me with fugitive.
Did you try the "D" command on the "Changes to be committed:" line in
a fugitive :Gstatus window? That shows a unified diff of _all_ staged
changes in _all_ files.
> Anyway, features like Gdiff or Gblame will stay key features in my workflow. I believe that fugitive, vim-gitgutter and vimagit are complementary.
>
> For all these reasons, I started to develop vimagit[2]. It is 100% inspired^Wcopied from Magit, from the display to the key bindings, trying to reproduce the same workflow. In a first time, I will only focus on stage part. In that sense, vimagit has reached an important step with version 1.4. IMO, it now embeds the minimal feature requirements to be a usable git staging tool, and not just a toy. I use it for my professional projects.
>
> You can see a complete description on github[2], and a demo on asciinema[3].
>
> Looking forward for feedback!
>
> Jérôme
>
> [1]: https://github.com/magit/magit
> [2]: https://github.com/jreybert/vimagit
> [3]: https://asciinema.org/a/28761
vimagit looks like a nice effort. But after watching the video, I
don't see what's very different from using the `D` command on the
"Changes to be committed:" line in a fugitive :Gstatus window. Are you
sure you explored all of fugitive's functionality (some of which is a
bit subtle)?
Thanks
Justin M. Keyes
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Sunday, November 1, 2015
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