On Tue, 2011-04-26 at 16:34 +0200, Daniel Fischer wrote: > On Tuesday 26 April 2011 16:04:55, Nick Bowler wrote: > > On 2011-04-26 15:51 +0200, Daniel Fischer wrote: > > > On Tuesday 26 April 2011 15:35:42, Ivan Lazar Miljenovic wrote: > > > > How do you "see" how git branches are related to each other? > > > > > > To some extent, you can see such a relation in gitk. For mercurial, hg > > > glog also shows a bit. I suppose there's also something to visualise > > > branches in bazaar, but I've never used that, so I don't know. > > > > > > So, with gitk/glog, you can see that foo branched off bar after commit > > > 0de8793fa1bc..., then checkout/update to that commit [or bar's head], > > > checkout/update to foo's head/tip and compare. > > > > No need to do a checkout; gitk can visualize any or all branches of the > > repository simultaneously. > > Yes, at least if you're only interested in the genealogy. > When I think about how branches are related, I think of contents at least > as much as of genealogy. Can gitk show the code next to each other? > I wouldn't be surprised, but I haven't yet found a way to do it (but I've > only taken a couple of short looks, so that doesn't say much).
I cannot say for gitk but gitview does it does it for sure: gitview --all --date-order Regards
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part
_______________________________________________ Haskell-Cafe mailing list Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe