this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2023
188 points (100.0% liked)
Opensource
10 readers
1 users here now
This magazine is dedicated to discussions on open source software, hardware, and technology. Whether you are a developer, a tech enthusiast, or simply interested in the philosophy of open source, this is the place for you. Here you can share your knowledge, ask questions, and engage in discussions on topics such as open source programming languages, operating systems, hardware, and more. From the benefits and challenges of open source to the latest developments and trends, this category covers a wide range of topics related to open source.
founded 2 years ago
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Cheers for the list. Great to keep an eye open for alternatives. What I'm looking for right now is a good GIT client for Ubuntu.
On windows I've got Sourecetree, it's free and got a really simple UI.
I've found a single program, SmartGit that looks decent but apparently it's just a trial version and they've got licenses. I haven't really found anything as a good substitute
Actually not trying to be a dick or a pedant, but is there a problem with just the
git
command? I've been using it since git existed so I don't really have anything to compare it to. The idea of finding another client seems a bit strange to me.While the CLI provides the same functionality, it can be a lot easier to visually parse information or provide direct interactivity with a GUI instead. If you're working on a large project or just want a different way to display the information
git
provides, it makes things a bit smoother.Generally I just use VSCode's source control UI when I want a GUI for git. I can't imagine using a standalone GUI for git when all the big editors have their own interfaces.
Oh same here, I'm not sure what the use-case for a standalone one would be but I definitely do prefer some visual over the command-line trees.
One thing I've found invaluable about a visual interface is the ability to quickly browse the commit tree. Having a big list of commits that you can sort and click to see the diff of each file has saved me on multiple occasions. I'm sure it's all info you can get from the CLI as well, but I can't imagine it being even half as fast.
I guess I can see that. It's not common I need to do so, but a few times I've went spelunking with
git log [file]
andgit diff sha..sha [file]
and I could see that being useful presented graphically.I’m actually kind of surprised that GitHub Desktop doesn’t have a Linux client. Found a blog where people have apparently made it work though.
You might try gitless if you don't find a decent GUI. Still command line but a bit more user friendly.