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Trying to learn GitHub at the moment and doing this Git essentials tutorial over at nettuts. I'm on the lesson about making commits.

The teacher types git commit and it opens VIM as his editor (I'd also like to know how to make it open up in Sublime Text 2 instead) anyways it opens in VIM and I add in 1 line saying this is my first commit and hit save.

Next it then prompts me to save the output to the desktop, something I did not see in his screencast. Now I'm still in VIM and not sure how to get back to 'normal' terminal :(

I couldn't figure it out so I just exited the terminal and relaunched it, did git commit again and had some warning messages about duplicates! Not sure if I need to (E)edit anyways or (A)abort.

git status

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vim

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message when I reopen terminal and do git commit again

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6 Answers 6

417

To save your work and exit press Esc and then :wq (w for write and q for quit).

Alternatively, you could both save and exit by pressing Esc and then :x

To set another editor run export EDITOR=myFavoriteEdioron your terminal, where myFavoriteEdior can be vi, gedit, subl(for sublime) etc.

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  • 2
    Te set the editor permanently you can use: git config --global core.editor myFavoriteEditor
    – Machta
    Feb 17, 2014 at 19:21
  • 1
    :q! if you don't want to save your changes. Apr 24, 2015 at 16:08
44

not really the answer to the VIM problem but you could use the command line to also enter the commit message:

git commit -m "This is the first commit"
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24

You need to return to normal mode and save the commit message with either

<Esc>:wq

or

<Esc>:x

or

<Esc>ZZ

The Esc key returns you from insert mode to normal mode. The :wq, :x or ZZ sequence writes the changes and exits the editor.

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17

Simply doing the vim "save and quit" command :wq should do the trick.

In order to have Git open it in another editor, you need to change the Git core.editor setting to a command which runs the editor you want.

git config --global core.editor "command to start sublime text 2"

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    Thanks for the tip on setting the editor to sublime text. I did run into one problem though, I had to set a --wait flag: git config --global core.editor "subl --wait". This prevents Aborting commit due to empty commit message.
    – Eric
    May 30, 2014 at 20:13
17

This is in answer to your question...

I'd also like to know how to make it open up in Sublime Text 2 instead

For Windows:

git config --global core.editor "'C:/Program Files/Sublime Text 2/sublime_text.exe'"

Check that the path for sublime_text.exe is correct and adjust if needed.

For Mac/Linux:

git config --global core.editor "subl -n -w"

If you get an error message such as:

error: There was a problem with the editor 'subl -n -w'.

Create the alias for subl

sudo ln -s /Applications/Sublime\ Text.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl /usr/local/bin/subl

Again check that the path matches for your machine.

For Sublime Text simply save cmd S and close the window cmd W to return to git.

1
  • That's a symbolic link, not an alias. Aliases are strings which get replaced by your shell in command contexts, though you should generally prefer shell functions over aliases.
    – tripleee
    Aug 27, 2023 at 19:25
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Like all well-behaved terminal applications which invoke an editor, git respects the value of the EDITOR or VISUAL environment variables. If neither of these are set, it will commonly fall back to something like vi (though on some platforms you might find yourself in nano or worse).

There are plenty of existing answers telling you how to quit vim, and even edit in vim if you really want to.

On Unix-like platforms, you can set EDITOR just for the duration of a single command:

EDITOR=emacsclient git commit

or you can define it for the remainder of your shell session:

export EDITOR=emacsclient

Add this to your .profile or similar to set it at login time for all sessions.

(For emacsclient in particular, you want to run M-x server-start in your currently running Emacs instance.)

To not use an editor at all, just pass your commit message as an argument to -m. Most Unix shells will let you pass in a multi-line string. Usually, you want the first line to summarize the entire commit (this is what is displayed e.g. by git log --oneline) and by convention, there should be an empty line after that to separate it from the rest of the message.

git commit -m 'Small fixes

Refactored all 1,365 source files by hand'

(Many shells will display a PS2 prompt, typically just >, while you are inside a multi-line quoted string.

[master] (venv) your usual shell prompt$ git commit -m 'Small changes (return)
> (return)
> More text' (return)

The lack of such simple obvious conveniences is one of the many, many, many reasons to avoid Windows.)

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