I am no longer maintaining this project as I no longer use Gitv. If you would like to maintain this project, please email gregsexton.
gitv is a repository viewer similar to gitk. It is an extension of the
fugitive git plugin for vim. It is essentially a wrapper around
git log --graph
, allowing you to see your branching history. It allows you to
view commits, diffstats, inline diffs, and file or folder specific history, and
more. It allows you to perform operations on the commit tree interactively,
such as merges, cherry picks, reversions, resets, deletions, checkouts,
bisections, and rebase operations.
This repo has the most bleeding edge version of gitv. Stable versions are available at the vim.org page.
Bugs, suggestions, pull requests and patches are all very welcome.
We are currently actively looking for feature requests and bugs regarding the latest pre-release.
Start the plugin by running :Gitv in Vim when viewing a file in a git repository.
This plugin is an extension of the fugitive git plugin by Tim Pope.
I hope you like it!
You will need the tpope/fugitive plugin installed and working for gitv to work.
For Windows, use the ~\vimfiles
directory instead of ~/.vim
Method | Instalation instructions |
---|---|
Manual | Merge the autoload , doc , ftplugin , plugin , and syntax folders into their respective ~/.vim folders |
NeoBundle | Add NeoBundle 'gregsexton/gitv' to .vimrc |
Pathogen | Run git clone https://github.com/gregsexton/gitv ~/.vim/bundle/gitv |
Plug | Add Plug 'gregsexton/gitv', {'on': ['Gitv']} to .vimrc |
Vundle | Add Plugin 'gregsexton/gitv' to .vimrc |
gitv was developed against Vim 7.3 and later 8.0 but earlier versions of Vim should work. Vim 7.2+ is recommended as it ships with syntax highlighting for many Git file types. Vim 7.3+ is recommended for UTF-8 support.
gitv now has basic neovim support.
gitv is a 'gitk clone' plugin for the text editor Vim. The goal is to give you a similar set of functionality as a repository viewer. Using this plugin you can view a repository's history including branching and merging, you can see which commits refs point to. You can quickly and easily view what changed to which files and when. You can perform arbitrary diffs (using Vim's excellent built in diff functionality) and you can easily check out whole commits and branches or just individual files if need be.
Throw in the fact that it is running in Vim and you get for free: the ability to move over repository history quickly and precisely using Vim's built in movement operators. You get excellent code syntax highlighting due to Vim's built in ability. You can open up all sorts of repository views in multiple windows and position them exactly how you like. You can take advantage of Vim's registers to copy multiple fragments of code from previous commits. The list goes on.
Click here for help on our official matrix.org server.
Future changes are viewable in the roadmap.
A tentative release schedule is available in the milestone view.
You can download stable release versions (and vote for gitv!) at
gitv’s page on vim.org
.