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I have TortoiseSVN installed and it works great. Would like to have an equally great interface to things hosted on Git.

  1. Is TortoiseGit as good as TortoiseSVN?
    • Can they both be installed without much trouble? Will menus be duplicated? Will stuff be weird? Any experiences with this?

I'm running Windows 7 64-bit, if that makes any difference.

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  • Re #1, in my opinion yes, and having Git more functionalities than SVN, TortoiseGit exposes a lot of them, probably all. Re #2, it worked right away for me, and no icon problems detected. Windows 8.1 Pro 64 bit, with "TortoiseSVN 1.9.3, Build 27038 - 64 Bit" already installed. I installed "TortoiseGit 2.0.0.0 git version 2.6.1.windows.1" on top of that. Mar 2, 2016 at 8:40

2 Answers 2

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  1. TortoiseGit has been rewritten in the same style as TortoiseSVN, it looks like some additions and some changes from the outside. It depends more on asking the question if Git is as goot as SVN. Seems they finished porting TortoiseGit, when I last tried it it was around 60% ported.

  2. I know that each thing that will be inserted in the system contains the word SVN, so with TortoiseGit that would be Git. They can be used next to each other, although you should watch out with the overlay icons. Just don't mix them up by using them in the same directory...

Just go and try it, nothing can go wrong. :-)

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    Nothing can go wrong.... right... :p haha. But I guess I will do that then! Really wish they would just put them all together into a nice Tortoise application. That would be awesome...
    – Svish
    Oct 26, 2009 at 15:14
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    Different teams, and those great tools being both free is already a good start I would say ;-)
    – RedGlyph
    Oct 26, 2009 at 18:34
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    seriously, why don't the Tortoise* groups get together and build a unified product? The basics of source control are similar in all of the tools (cvs, arch, darcs, git, hg, svn, bzr, etc). I use multiple repository types already - why not have a tool adapted to supporting that? I'd rather have tools that supported urls though, such as git://kernel.org, svn://tigris.org, etc and launch the right tool,
    – Chris K
    Jul 9, 2010 at 21:07
  • Yeah, a system that calls a plug-in for an action would be great. Jul 10, 2010 at 14:12
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    I am currently using git and SVN on the same projects (to not pollute the company-wide SVN repository with my multi-branches experiments that stay on my non-share git repository). It all works fine except for the overlay icons: they take the 'worst' status from both, and refresh oddly. The rest works very well
    – PPC
    Jul 9, 2012 at 21:01
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I'm running windows 7 32bit. I had tortoisesvn for a long time now, and I added tortoise git about a week ago...

So far the only bad thing I noticed is that, sometimes, if I try to open a folder that is svn'ed it takes a few seconds more, but that's it :-)

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