On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 7:53 AM, Grant Edwards <invalid@invalid.invalid> wrote: > On 2013-06-13, Chris Angelico <ros...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 3:06 AM, Grant Edwards <invalid@invalid.invalid> >> wrote: >> I do almost exclusively Linux dev, but occasionally nip onto Windows >> for one reason or another (possibly inside a virtual machine). It's >> possible to get git for Windows, including gitk and 'git gui' (not >> sure about any other graphical tools, they're the only two I use) > > Unfortunately, something that requires typing commands would not fly. > I mostly use svn via command line and sometimes via meld, but for some > others (even one Linux developer), if it can't be done done entirely > from a GUI, then it isn't going to get done. > > If it wasn't for Cygwin, I'd never be able to accomplish much of > anything in Windows. :)
Check out 'git gui' then - and in the Windows build, that's in the Start menu directly. I usually use git gui only for partial commits (it's more convenient than 'git add -p' when the parts to commit and the parts to not-commit are right next to each other), but it can be your full console. For those who like the graphical things in life, it's a good choice. That and gitk for viewing the repo. I use gitk *all the time*, at work and on my own projects, because it is excellent. (Actually I use a minorly-patched gitk; must remember to submit the patch upstream some day.) ChrisA -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list