SVN Time-Lapse View is a cross-platform viewer that downloads all revisions of a file and lets you scroll through them by dragging a slider. As you scroll, you are shown a visual diff of the current revision and the previous revision. Thus you can see how a file evolved, and you can easily find the revision at which lines appeared, disappeared, or changed.
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From the command line, I suggest one way: git whatchanged -p pathToACertainFile Which will show all the full diffs that have occurred to that file, and which sha hash they were done at (from latest to earliest). Best if you have your terminal set up to show stuff colorized. |
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If you are on a mac, you might want to try GitX As quoted from the site:
May not do completely what you want but the history viewer should help. |
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You may want to spend some time exploring |
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It's not quite a slider, but the Git bundle for TextMate lets you browse revisions for a single file via a dropdown menu. It highlights changes for the current revision, and also names the person who last edited a line, |
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