654

I'm trying out Git on Windows. I got to the point of trying "git commit" and I got this error:

Terminal is dumb but no VISUAL nor EDITOR defined. Please supply the message using either -m or -F option.

So I figured out I need to have an environment variable called EDITOR. No problem. I set it to point to Notepad. That worked, almost. The default commit message opens in Notepad. But Notepad doesn't support bare line feeds. I went out and got Notepad++, but I can't figure out how to get Notepad++ set up as the %EDITOR% in such a way that it works with Git as expected.

I'm not married to Notepad++. At this point I don't mind what editor I use. I just want to be able to type commit messages in an editor rather than the command line (with -m).

Those of you using Git on Windows: What tool do you use to edit your commit messages, and what did you have to do to make it work?

6
  • 7
    TLDR: put single quotes around the path to the editor executable
    – yoyo
    Mar 16, 2014 at 23:19
  • Probably not helpful, but FWIW, I just use regular notepad. I did nothing to make it work. It just worked out of the box by default... Sep 5, 2014 at 6:05
  • 17
    Update September 2015: a simple git config core.editor notepad is now enough. See my updated answer below.
    – VonC
    Sep 21, 2015 at 11:59
  • Just a quick note that JEdit is not an appropriate editor for git. JEdit only opens one instance even for multiple files. If it was already open, git will cause it to open a new file, but then you have to completely close JEdit before git will continue. There is no command line option to cause JEdit to open a separate instance for editing the commit message. Feb 26, 2017 at 3:23
  • Possible duplicate of How do I make Git use the editor of my choice for commits? Feb 4, 2018 at 0:30

37 Answers 37

638

Update September 2015 (6 years later)

The last release of git-for-Windows (2.5.3) now includes:

By configuring git config core.editor notepad, users can now use notepad.exe as their default editor.
Configuring git config format.commitMessageColumns 72 will be picked up by the notepad wrapper and line-wrap the commit message after the user edits it.

See commit 69b301b by Johannes Schindelin (dscho).

And Git 2.16 (Q1 2018) will show a message to tell the user that it is waiting for the user to finish editing when spawning an editor, in case the editor opens to a hidden window or somewhere obscure and the user gets lost.

See commit abfb04d (07 Dec 2017), and commit a64f213 (29 Nov 2017) by Lars Schneider (larsxschneider).
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano (gitster).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster -- in commit 0c69a13, 19 Dec 2017)

launch_editor(): indicate that Git waits for user input

When a graphical GIT_EDITOR is spawned by a Git command that opens and waits for user input (e.g. "git rebase -i"), then the editor window might be obscured by other windows.
The user might be left staring at the original Git terminal window without even realizing that s/he needs to interact with another window before Git can proceed. To this user Git appears hanging.

Print a message that Git is waiting for editor input in the original terminal and get rid of it when the editor returns, if the terminal supports erasing the last line


Original answer

I just tested it with git version 1.6.2.msysgit.0.186.gf7512 and Notepad++5.3.1

I prefer to not have to set an EDITOR variable, so I tried:

git config --global core.editor "\"c:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe\""
# or
git config --global core.editor "\"c:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe\" %*"

That always gives:

C:\prog\git>git config --global --edit
"c:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe" %*: c:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe: command not found
error: There was a problem with the editor '"c:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe" %*'.

If I define a npp.bat including:

"c:\Program Files\Notepad++\notepad++.exe" %*

and I type:

C:\prog\git>git config --global core.editor C:\prog\git\npp.bat

It just works from the DOS session, but not from the git shell.
(not that with the core.editor configuration mechanism, a script with "start /WAIT..." in it would not work, but only open a new DOS window)


Bennett's answer mentions the possibility to avoid adding a script, but to reference directly the program itself between simple quotes. Note the direction of the slashes! Use / NOT \ to separate folders in the path name!

git config --global core.editor \
"'C:/Program Files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin"

Or if you are in a 64 bit system:

git config --global core.editor \
"'C:/Program Files (x86)/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin"

But I prefer using a script (see below): that way I can play with different paths or different options without having to register again a git config.


The actual solution (with a script) was to realize that:
what you refer to in the config file is actually a shell (/bin/sh) script, not a DOS script.

So what does work is:

C:\prog\git>git config --global core.editor C:/prog/git/npp.bat

with C:/prog/git/npp.bat:

#!/bin/sh
"c:/Program Files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe" -multiInst "$*"

or

#!/bin/sh
"c:/Program Files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe" -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin "$*"

With that setting, I can do 'git config --global --edit' from DOS or Git Shell, or I can do 'git rebase -i ...' from DOS or Git Shell.
Bot commands will trigger a new instance of notepad++ (hence the -multiInst' option), and wait for that instance to be closed before going on.

Note that I use only '/', not \'. And I installed msysgit using option 2. (Add the git\bin directory to the PATH environment variable, but without overriding some built-in windows tools)

The fact that the notepad++ wrapper is called .bat is not important.
It would be better to name it 'npp.sh' and to put it in the [git]\cmd directory though (or in any directory referenced by your PATH environment variable).


See also:


lightfire228 adds in the comments:

For anyone having an issue where N++ just opens a blank file, and git doesn't take your commit message, see "Aborting commit due to empty message": change your .bat or .sh file to say:

"<path-to-n++" .git/COMMIT_EDITMSG -<arguments>. 

That will tell notepad++ to open the temp commit file, rather than a blank new one.

17
  • In your shell script, you need double quotes around $*, otherwise it won't work properly for paths with spaces in them. Thanks for the thorough explanation - I'm installing git (and a bunch of other stuff) on Windows for beginning programmers, and the command line is hard enough to grok without making them learn vi commands.
    – Sarah Mei
    May 26, 2009 at 0:09
  • Another concrete example: stackoverflow.com/questions/1634161/…
    – VonC
    Nov 1, 2009 at 22:59
  • 1
    Following Bennett's answer you do not need to create a script, you can just use an apostrophe ' inside the quotes ". Jul 22, 2010 at 7:49
  • @Tobias: true, I have included his answer in mine, as well as the reason why I still prefer referencing a script in my git config settings.
    – VonC
    Jul 22, 2010 at 8:23
  • 8
    @NateGlenn Use the shortened dir /X equivalent: "PROGRA~2" for "Program Files (x86)", which is a good habit to get into when using cross-platform compatible tools on Windows, which allows you to squash the whitespace.
    – JJ Zabkar
    May 8, 2013 at 15:54
362

Building on Darren's answer, to use Notepad++ you can simply do this (all on one line):

git config --global core.editor "'C:/Program Files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin"

Obviously, the C:/Program Files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe part should be the path to the Notepad++ executable on your system. For example, it might be C:/Program Files (x86)/Notepad++/notepad++.exe.

It works like a charm for me.

Article How to set Notepad++ as the default Git editor for commits instead of Vim explains parameters of the command.

16
  • 11
    Me too! BTW, those switches are explained at C:/Program Files/Notepad++/user.manual/documentation/notepad-user-manual/command-line.html May 9, 2011 at 3:21
  • 25
    Watch for Notepad++ being located in `C:\Program Files(x86)` Aug 4, 2011 at 14:09
  • 8
    For x64 Windows change to: git config --global core.editor "'C:/Program Files (x86)/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin"
    – Velocoder
    Sep 25, 2012 at 15:13
  • 4
    I realize I'm late to this party, but out of curiosity, does anyone know (or even remember, after all these years) why one would specify "-notabbar"? I understand the reasoning behind the other parameters (well, not sure why "-noPlugin", actually), but not this one.
    – Wilson F
    Oct 31, 2014 at 20:52
  • 12
    @WilsonF The reason is because you MUST exit notepad++ for git to stop waiting for your input and continue. You don't want to open other tabs in this instance of Notepad++ because then your git session would appear to be frozen! Those settings do exactly the right thing: if you have Notepad++ already open, you get a new instance, that doesn't let you open other files, and that you must close when done with in order for git to know you're done editing. Works the same for commit messages.
    – ErikE
    Oct 21, 2015 at 22:59
53

Anyway, I've just been playing around with this and found the following to work nicely for me:

git config --global core.editor "'C:/Program Files/TextPad 5/TextPad.exe' -m"

I don't think CMD likes single-quotes so you must use double quotes "to specify the space embedded string argument".

Cygwin (which I believe is the underlying platform for Git's Bash) on the other hand likes both ' and "; you can specify a CMD-like paths, using / instead of \, so long as the string is quoted i.e. in this instance, using single-quotes.

The -m overrides/indicates the use of multiple editors and there is no need for a %* tacked on the end.

5
  • Thanks for the single/double quote explanation, makes sense now! May 31, 2012 at 14:13
  • 4
    git config --global core.editor "'C:\Program Files\Sublime Text 3\sublime_text.exe' -m" works like a charm for me. Jan 6, 2015 at 1:05
  • I used ` git config --global code.editor "'C:\\Program Files\\Sublime Text 3\\sublime_text.exe' -n -w -m"`, however when i run "git commit" it opens up a Notepad editor. Any thoughts on why this would be the case? Thanks in advance.
    – Ryan Chase
    Nov 24, 2016 at 4:30
  • @RyanChase Remove the local config entry from ./git/config e.g editor = notepad May 15, 2018 at 2:15
  • 1
    Git Bash runs under MingW64, not Cygwin. Cygwin has its own Git binary. Apr 14, 2020 at 21:06
28

Edit: After updating to Vim 7.3, I've come to the conclusion that the cleanest and easiest way to do this is:

  1. Add Vim's main folder to your path (right click on My ComputerPropertiesAdvancedEnvironment Variables)

  2. Run this:

    git config --global core.editor "gvim --nofork '%*'"
    

If you do it this way, then I am fairly sure it will work with Cygwin as well.

Original answer:

Even with a couple of Vim-related answers, I was having trouble getting this to work with gVim under Windows (while not using a batch file or %EDITOR% or Cygwin).

What I eventually arrived at is nice and clean, and draws from a few of the solutions here:

git config --global core.editor \
"'C:/Program Files/Vim/vim72/gvim.exe' --nofork '%*'"

One gotcha that took me a while is these are not the Windows-style backslashes. They are normal forward slashes.

2
  • 1
    If vim is installed in Program Files(x86), then you need to change the path obviously.
    – Swapnil
    Nov 12, 2014 at 11:26
  • 9 years later - but note that VIM 90 installs BAT files in c:\Windows for me, so I can do git config --global core.editor "'C:/Windows/gvim.bat' --nofork '%*'" and it works for me
    – rich p
    Jan 29 at 19:41
16

Notepad++ works just fine, although I choose to stick with Notepad, -m, or even sometimes the built-in "edit."

The problem you are encountering using Notepad++ is related to how Git is launching the editor executable. My solution to this is to set environment variable EDITOR to a batch file, rather than the actual editor executable, that does the following:

start /WAIT "E:\PortableApps\Notepad++Portable\Notepad++Portable.exe" %*

/WAIT tells the command line session to halt until the application exits, thus you will be able to edit to your heart's content while Git happily waits for you. %* passes all arguments to the batch file through to Notepad++.

C:\src> echo %EDITOR%
C:\tools\runeditor.bat
1
14

For Atom you can do

git config --global core.editor "atom --wait"

and similar for Visual Studio Code

git config --global core.editor "code --wait"

which will open up an Atom or Visual Studio Code window for you to commit through,

or for Sublime Text:

git config --global core.editor "subl -n -w"
1
  • Much more simpler and effective. Thank you.
    – rom
    Feb 26, 2018 at 13:19
12

WordPad!

I'm happy using Vim, but since I'm trying to introduce Git to the company I wanted something that we'd all have, and found that WordPad seems to work okay (i.e. Git does wait until you're finished editing and close the window).

git config core.editor '"C:\Program Files\Windows NT\Accessories\wordpad.exe"'

That's using Git Bash on msysgit; I've not tried from the Windows command prompt (if that makes any difference).

5
  • I liked the simplicity of this, but it didn't work for me out of the box. Here is what I tried. I receive the following error message: error: There was a problem with the editor 'C:\Program Files\Windows NT\Accessories\wordpad.exe'. Aug 24, 2013 at 2:00
  • 3
    The quotes are incorrect. You must put the double quotes outside the single quotes. That is, use "'C:\Program Files\Windows NT\Accessories\wordpad.exe'", and it will then work. Aug 24, 2013 at 2:10
  • You may also benefit from forward slashes (/) instead of backslashes (\). Feb 4, 2014 at 18:16
  • 1
    Also, it's probably best to use "git config --global" instead of just "git config" for this. You most likely want the setting to apply to all of the git repositories on your workstation, not just the one you're in right now. Feb 4, 2014 at 18:17
  • @ChrisJones, No point in this case because "program files" has a space between it.
    – Pacerier
    Oct 14, 2015 at 10:53
10

I also use Cygwin on Windows, but with gVim (as opposed to the terminal-based Vim).

To make this work, I have done the following:

  1. Created a one-line batch file (named git_editor.bat) which contains the following: "C:/Program Files/Vim/vim72/gvim.exe" --nofork "%*"
  2. Placed git_editor.bat on in my PATH.
  3. Set GIT_EDITOR=git_editor.bat

With this done, git commit, etc. will correctly invoke the gVim executable.

NOTE 1: The --nofork option to gVim ensures that it blocks until the commit message has been written.

NOTE 2: The quotes around the path to gVim is required if you have spaces in the path.

NOTE 3: The quotes around "%*" are needed just in case Git passes a file path with spaces.

2
9

Edit .gitconfig file in c:\Users\YourUser folder and add:

[core]
editor = 'C:\\Program files\\path\\to\\editor.exe'
9

Thanks to the Stack Overflow community ... and a little research I was able to get my favorite editor, EditPad Pro, to work as the core editor with msysgit 1.7.5.GIT and TortoiseGit v1.7.3.0 over Windows XP SP3...

Following the advice above, I added the path to a Bash script for the code editor...

git config --global core.editor c:/msysgit/cmd/epp.sh

However, after several failed attempts at the above mentioned solutions ... I was finally able to get this working. Per EditPad Pro's documentation, adding the '/newinstance' flag would allow the shell to wait for the editor input...

The '/newinstance' flag was the key in my case...

#!/bin/sh
"C:/Program Files/JGsoft/EditPadPro6/EditPadPro.exe" //newinstance "$*"
5
  • Yeah, that double slash for the newinstance parameter should be in Editpad's docs. Thanks for noting it here!
    – gwideman
    Nov 10, 2014 at 6:45
  • EditPad Pro requires command line switches like /newinstance to have exactly one forward slash. This is fairly normal for Windows applications. If you're invoking EditPad from a UNIX shell then you'll need to use whatever mechanism your shell offers to escape the forward slash so it does not see the switch as an absolute path and passes a single literal forward slash to EditPad's command line. Nov 11, 2014 at 7:53
  • 2
    If you have EditPad Pro 7, and you want to invoke EditPad Pro from a process that wants to wait on EditPad's process, then you should pass the /wait switch on EditPad's command line. You can use /wait with or without /newinstance to control whether a new EditPad window should be opened or whether an existing window should be reused. The process launched by your script will wait for the file to be closed regardless of whether a window was created or reused. EditPad Pro 6 and prior do not support /wait. Nov 11, 2014 at 7:57
  • @JanGoyvaerts ~ Thanks for the /wait flag tip sir... :) Nov 18, 2016 at 15:12
  • I was unable to get EditPad Lite working for me by using the instructions above. Perhaps it was because I was trying to invoke EditPad (through Git) by using the Windows terminal rather than Git Bash or some other UNIX shell. What worked for me was to directly edit the [core] section of .gitconfig to include the line editor = "'C:/Program Files/Just Great Software/EditPad Lite 7/EditPadLite7.exe' //wait //newinstance".
    – user697473
    Oct 29, 2019 at 20:43
7

This is the one symptom of greater issues. Notably that you have something setting TERM=dumb. Other things that don't work properly are the less command which says you don't have a fully functional terminal.

It seems like this is most commonly caused by having TERM set to something in your global Windows environment variables. For me, the issue came up when I installed Strawberry Perl some information about this is on the msysgit bug for this problem as well as several solutions.

The first solution is to fix it in your ~/.bashrc by adding:

export TERM=msys

You can do this from the Git Bash prompt like so:

echo "export TERM=msys" >> ~/.bashrc

The other solution, which ultimately is what I did because I don't care about Strawberry Perl's reasons for adding TERM=dumb to my environment settings, is to go and remove the TERM=dumb as directed in this comment on the msysgit bug report.

Control Panel/System/Advanced/Environment Variables... (or similar, depending on your version of Windows) is where sticky environment variables are set on Windows. By default, TERM is not set. If TERM is set in there, then you (or one of the programs you have installed - e.g. Strawberry Perl) has set it. Delete that setting, and you should be fine.

Similarly if you use Strawberry Perl and care about the CPAN client or something like that, you can leave the TERM=dumb alone and use unset TERM in your ~/.bashrc file which will have a similar effect to setting an explicit term as above.

Of course, all the other solutions are correct in that you can use git config --global core.editor $MYFAVORITEEDITOR to make sure that Git uses your favorite editor when it needs to launch one for you.

1
  • thx so much! i've had this problem because of Strawberry perl and it was driving me mad! thx for pointing this out May 9, 2013 at 18:06
6

Vim/gVim works well for me.

>echo %EDITOR%

c:\Vim\Vim71\vim.exe
6

I needed to do both of the following to get Git to launch Notepad++ in Windows:

  • Add the following to .gitconfig:

    editor = 'C:/Program Files/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin
    
  • Modify the shortcut to launch the Git Bash shell to run as administrator, and then use that to launch the Git Bash shell. I was guessing that the context menu entry "Git Bash here" was not launching Notepad++ with the required permissions.

After doing both of the above, it worked.

5

I had PortableGit 1.6 working fine, but after upgrading to the PortableGit 1.7 Windows release, I had problems. Some of the Git commands opens up the Notepad++.exe fine, but some don't, especially Git rebase behaves differently.

The problem is some commands run the Windows cmd process and some use the Unix cmd process. I want to give startup attributes to Notepad++ editor, so I need to have a customized script. My solution is this.

  1. Create a script to run an appropriate text editor. The script looks weird, but it handles both the Windows and Unix variation.

    c:/PortableGit/cmd/git-editor.bat

    #!/bin/sh
    # Open a new instance
    
    function doUnix() {
      "c:\program files\notepad++\notepad++.exe" -multiInst -nosession -notabbar $*
      exit
    }
    
    doUnix $*
    
    :WINCALL
    "c:\program files\notepad++\notepad++.exe" -multiInst -nosession -notabbar %*
    
  2. Set the global core.editor variable

    The script was saved to git/cmd folder, so it's already in a gitconsole path. This is mandatory as a full path may not work properly.

    git config --global core.editor "git-editor.bat"
    

Now I can run the git commit -a and git rebase -i master commands. Give it a try if you have problems in the Git Windows tool.

5

I use Git on multiple platforms, and I like to use the same Git settings on all of them. (In fact, I have all my configuration files under release control with Git, and put a Git repository clone on each machine.) The solution I came up with is this:

I set my editor to giteditor

git config --global core.editor giteditor

Then I create a symbolic link called giteditor which is in my PATH. (I have a personal bin directory, but anywhere in the PATH works.) That link points to my current editor of choice. On different machines and different platforms, I use different editors, so this means that I don't have to change my universal Git configuration (.gitconfig), just the link that giteditor points to.

Symbolic links are handled by every operating system I know of, though they may use different commands. For Linux, you use ln -s. For Windows, you use the cmd built-in mklink. They have different syntaxes (which you should look up), but it all works the same way, really.

1
  • Actually, I tried this on Windows7 and it doesn't work from msys git. It says error: cannot spawn giteditor: No such file or directory
    – DanielSank
    Jul 16, 2014 at 4:32
5

Based on VonC's suggestion, this worked for me (was driving me crazy):

git config --global core.editor "'C:/Program Files (x86)/Sublime Text 3/subl.exe' -wait"

Omitting -wait can cause problems, especially if you are working with Gerrit and change ids that have to be manually copied to the bottom of your commit message.

5

Say you want to configure VsCode to be your editor. Do the following:

Add the following lines to your .gitconfig file:

The default location of .gitconfig file is C:\Users\USER_NAME\.gitconfig

[core]
  editor = code -w -n
[diff]
  tool = vscode
[difftool "vscode"]
  cmd = code -w -n --diff $LOCAL $REMOTE
[merge]
  tool = vscode
[mergetool "vscode"]
  cmd = code -w -n $MERGED

NOTE:

  • -w is mandatory, and tells git to wait for vscode to load.
  • -n is optional, and tells git to open vscode in a new-window.

In case you want to configure a custom path to the editor in Windows:

You need to replace the word code with Path to '.exe' of VsCode.

For example:

[core]
  editor = "'C:/Users/Tal/AppData/Local/Programs/Microsoft VS Code/Code.exe'" -w -n
[diff]
  tool = vscode
[difftool "vscode"]
  cmd = "'C:/Users/Tal/AppData/Local/Programs/Microsoft VS Code/Code.exe'" -w -n --diff $LOCAL $REMOTE
[merge]
  tool = vscode
[mergetool "vscode"]
  cmd = "'C:/Users/Tal/AppData/Local/Programs/Microsoft VS Code/Code.exe'" -w -n $MERGED

Note:

  • You need to surround the path with single-quotes ''.
  • The slashes in the path should be forward-slashes /.

Or another example:

[core]
    editor = \"C:\\Users\\Tal\\AppData\\Local\\Programs\\Microsoft VS Code\\Code.exe\" -w -n

[diff]
    tool = vscode
[difftool "vscode"]
    cmd = \"C:\\Users\\Tal\\AppData\\Local\\Programs\\Microsoft VS Code\\Code.exe\" -w -n --diff $LOCAL $REMOTE

[merge]
    tool = vscode
[mergetool "vscode"]
    cmd = \"C:\\Users\\Tal\\AppData\\Local\\Programs\\Microsoft VS Code\\Code.exe\" -w -n $MERGED

UPDATE:

VsCode supports now "3-way merges"! The update was done in versions 1.69.0 and 1.70.0. So now you can enable the VsCode "mergetool" to view 3-way merges.

To do so, you need to update the line:

[mergetool "vscode"]
      cmd = code -w -n $MERGED

with the new line:

[mergetool "vscode"]
      cmd = code -w -n --merge $REMOTE $LOCAL $BASE $MERGED
3

I use Cygwin on Windows, so I use:

export EDITOR="emacs -nw"

The -nw is for no-windows, i.e. tell Emacs not to try and use X Window.

The Emacs keybindings don't work for me from a Windows shell, so I would only use this from a Cygwin shell... (rxvt is recommended.)

3

This is my setup to use Geany as an editor for Git:

git config --global core.editor C:/path/to/geany.bat

with the following content in geany.bat:

#!/bin/sh
"C:\Program Files\Geany\bin\Geany.exe" --new-instance "$*"

It works in both a DOS console and msysgit.

1
  • 2
    VonC answered about notepad++, my answer is for Geany?
    – CharlesB
    May 9, 2011 at 6:12
2

It seems as if Git won't find the editor if there are spaces in the path. So you will have to put the batch file mentioned in Patrick's answer into a non-whitespace path.

1
  • 3
    This format works fine for paths with spaces: git config --global core.editor "\"c:\Program Files\textpad 5\textpad.exe\"" so it may be practical for you to avoid creating a batch file
    – Carl
    Jun 12, 2009 at 9:31
2

I prefer to use Emacs. Getting it set up can be a little tricky.

  1. Download Emacs and unpack it somewhere like c:\emacs.
  2. Run c:\emacs\bin\addpm.exe. You need to right-click and "Run as Administrator" if you are using Windows Vista or above. This will put the executables in your path.
  3. Add (server-start) somewhere in your .emacs file. See the Emacs Windows FAQ for advice on where to put your .emacs file.
  4. git config --global core.editor emacsclientw

Git will now open files within an existing Emacs process. You will have to run that existing process manually from c:\emacs\bin\runemacs.exe.

1

I managed to get the environment version working by setting the EDITOR variable using quotes and /:

EDITOR="c:/Program Files (x86)/Notepad++/notepad++.exe"
1

I've had difficulty getting Git to cooperate with WordPad, Komodo Edit and pretty much every other editor I give it. Most open for editing, but Git clearly doesn't wait for the save/close to happen.

As a crutch, I've just been doing i.e.

git commit -m "Fixed the LoadAll method"

to keep things moving. It tends to keep my commit messages a little shorter than they probably should be, but clearly there's some work to be done on the Windows version of Git.

The GitGUI also isn't that bad. It takes a little bit of orientation, but after that, it works fairly well.

1

I've just had the same problem and found a different solution. I was getting

error: There was a problem with the editor 'ec'

I've got VISUAL=ec, and a batch file called ec.bat on my path that contains one line:

c:\emacs\emacs-23.1\bin\emacsclient.exe %*

This lets me edit files from the command line with ec <filename>, and having VISUAL set means most unixy programs pick it up too. Git seems to search the path differently to my other commands though - when I looked at a git commit in Process Monitor I saw it look in every folder on the path for ec and for ec.exe, but not for ec.bat. I added another environment variable (GIT_EDITOR=ec.bat) and all was fine.

1

I'm using GitHub for Windows which is a nice visual option. But I also prefer the command line, so to make it work when I open a repository in a Git shell I just set the following:

git config --global core.editor vim

which works great.

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This works for PowerShell and cmder 1.2 (when used with PowerShell). In file ~/.gitconfig:

[core]
    editor = 'c:/program files/sublime text 3/subl.exe' -w

How can I make Sublime Text the default editor for Git?

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I found a a beautifully simple solution posted here - although there may be a mistake in the path in which you have to copy over the "subl" file given by the author.

I am running Windows 7 x64, and I had to put the "subl" file in my /Git/cmd/ folder to make it work.

It works like a charm, though.

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Atom and Windows 10

  1. I right clicked the Atom icon at the desktop and clicked on properties.

  2. Copied the "Start in" location path

  3. Looked over there with Windows Explorer and found "atom.exe".

  4. I typed this in Git Bash:

    git config --global core.editor C:/Users/YOURNAMEUSER/AppData/Local/atom/app-1.7.4/atom.exe"
    

Note: I changed all \ for / . I created a .bashrc at my home directory and used / to set my home directory and it worked, so I assumed / will be the way to go.

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  • please check this URL it will be useful to raise your content quality up Jun 1, 2016 at 2:32
  • @willie Thank you, i formatted the text and added some tags. Hope that will improve it a little bit. Jun 4, 2016 at 5:40
  • Im getting this error: %LocalAppData%\atom.exe --wait: line 0: fg: no job control
    – nelson6e65
    Jun 6, 2021 at 13:14
  • Also error for %LocalAppData%\\atom\\bin\\atom.cmd --wait
    – nelson6e65
    Jun 6, 2021 at 13:18
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to add sublime git config --global core.editor "'C:\Program Files\Sublime Text 3\sublime_text.exe'"

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  • 1
    While this code may answer the question, providing additional context regarding why and/or how this code answers the question improves its long-term value. Dec 18, 2020 at 11:11
1

I solved a similar issue using GIT_EDITOR variable and notepad2 as editor.

Solution 1: Set the environment variable GIT_EDITOR to C:/tools/notepad2.exe. This works nicely, but git complains if the commit message has non-ASCII characters.

Solution 2: Set GIT_EDITOR to C:/tools/notepad2.exe //utf8. Notice the double slash in front of the program switch. BTW: -utf8 would have worked as well.

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