Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I'm using the github windows shell and I'll do the following

git status

see a list of modified files and want to remind myself what's changed. I'll have to type something like

git diff Source\FooBar\Pages\FooBar.aspx

That seems like a lot of characters to have to type. Is there some easier workflow to look at diffs that I'm not seeing?

share|improve this question
This would be better served on SO as it deals with programming tools/implementation and not conceptual/design issues. Please do not re-ask it there as this can be migrated. A good rule to follow is if your question has you in front of your IDE it belongs on SO. If it has you in front of a whiteboard it belongs on Programmers. – Walter Dec 31 '12 at 23:36
What specifically do you want to avoid? Do you want to avoid having to see the diff of each file individually? Do you want to get the diff of a particular file without typing the full path? – akton Jan 1 at 9:33
I specifically want to avoid typing the entire path for each file I want to git diff – user76379 Jan 1 at 14:22

migrated from programmers.stackexchange.com Jan 1 at 2:56

3 Answers

If you want to review all changes, you can simply use git diff. It will not list new files, though.

To selectively look at changes, I would recommend to use a GUI, e.g., git gui or gitk.

share|improve this answer

I use Console2 to host bash.

With this I'm able to use Ctrl + Click and Drag to highlight text which can then be copied to the clipboard and pasted into further command lines.

I use this to copy file paths.

This enabled me to type git diff [Ctrl+V] and get the command line I want.

share|improve this answer
insert also works as opposed to ctrl+v – xero Jan 2 at 20:31

most terminals (e.g. console2 for windows) have auto-completion.

start typing and press tab

usually git can auto-complete after 2 characters. like:

gi tab di tab

will give you git diff. if your folders are not named similarly than it might auto-complete after a single character. like if your project root had three files:

  • readme
  • /source/
  • /bin/

you could simply type r, s, or b then tab to auto-type any of those file names.

fyi, auto complete works for terminal and git commands, file and directory names, branch and tag names, but unfortunately not for commit ids.

share|improve this answer
autocomplete works for the gi tab di tab part but then not for the filename part. which, when your filename is usually something long like Source\FooBar\Pages\FooBar.aspx it makes it really frustrating to use – user76379 Jan 27 at 3:19
that is totally not true (in windows msysgit, which i use). i just tried it in an open repo. gi tab di tab st tab c tab... becomes git diff style/css/ it auto types the slashes an everything. – xero Jan 29 at 20:02

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.