Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
115 lines (74 loc) · 3.77 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

115 lines (74 loc) · 3.77 KB

scmpuff 💨

Makes working with git from the command line quicker by substituting numeric shortcuts for files.

scmpuff is a minimalistic reinterpretation of the core functionality of SCM Breeze, without many of the extras.

It is focused on simplicity, speed, robustness, and cross-platform support. The majority of the functionality is contained within a compiled binary, and the shell integration is under 100 lines of shell script.

scmpuff currently functions in bash and zsh in any *nix-like operating system. It's written with cross-platform support in mind, so hopefully we'll have it functioning on Windows soon as well.

Installation

Download the binary for your platform, and copy it to /usr/local/bin or somewhere else in your default $PATH.

Alternately, if you use homebrew, you can just: brew install scmpuff. 🍺

Setup

Currently scmpuff supports bash, zsh and fish for all functionality.

To initialize shell functions, add the following to your ~/.bash_profile or ~/.zshrc file:

eval "$(scmpuff init -s)"

or for fish, add the following to your ~/.config/fish/config.fish file:

scmpuff init --shell=fish | source

This will define the scmpuff shell functions as well as some handy shortcuts.

Usage

Once things are loaded, the most important function you will want to know about is scmpuff_status, which is aliased to gs for short.

This is a replacement for git status that is pretty and shows you numbers next to each filename, for example:

$ gs
# On branch: master  |  +1  |  [*] => $e*
#
➤ Changes not staged for commit
#
#       modified:  [1] main.go
#
➤ Untracked files
#
#      untracked:  [2] HELLO.txt
#      untracked:  [3] features/shell_aliases.feature
#      untracked:  [4] mkramdisk.sh
#

You can now use these numbers in place of filenames when calling normal git commands, e.g. git add 2 3 or git checkout 1.

You can also use numeric ranges, e.g. git reset 2-4. Ranges can even be mixed with normal numeric operands.

Behind the scenes, scmpuff is assigning filenames to sequential environment variables, e.g. $e1, $e2, so you can refer to those with other commands too if needed.

By default, scmpuff will also define a few handy shortcuts to save your fingers, e.g. ga, gd, gco. Check your aliases to see what they are.

FAQ

How do you pronounce it?

💁 I like to say "scum puff." But I'm weird.

How does it compare with SCM Breeze?

The short version: it does less, but is faster and should be more stable and reliable, especially across different platforms.

The long, detailed version: https://github.com/mroth/scmpuff/wiki/scmpuff-vs-SCM-Breeze

Can I disable or change the default git shortcut aliases?

You can disable them via passing --aliases=false to the scmpuff init call in your shell initialization. Then, if you wish to remap them, simple modify your default aliases wherever you normally do, but add aliases mapped to the scmpuff shell functions, e.g. alias gs='scmpuff_status'.

I want to use scmpuff in conjunction with hub or something else that I've aliased git to, how would I do so?

By default, scmpuff will attempt to utilize the absolute path of whatever git it finds in your system PATH, ignoring existing shell aliases. If you want to use a different binary, set $SCMPUFF_GIT_CMD in your shell to the path, for example, export SCMPUFF_GIT_CMD=/usr/local/bin/hub.