What if there are thousands of commits? What's the fastest way to see all the tagged releases? Say for things like version 1, 2, 3, etc. Also for Github. This is helpful! I don't know how I missed this, but spent a solid 15mins trying to figure out how to download an older state copy of the repo as a standalone zip.
Perfect, thank you! Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown. The Overflow Blog. Podcast An oral history of Stack Overflow — told by its founding team. I actually forgot to do so. I'll add that to my task list! If not, where can I get the windows version?
For my workflow the native app is truly the best I use it simply to make commits, with a great preview of what I'm committing and being able to select just the lines that matter for the commit.
I think going electron, while simplifying your code base, was a giant step backwards. Thanks your so much for keeping the old version available! I'm sticking to this version in the hope the graph history view will be implemented in the new one I had to reset my mac and when I installed the new version it was terrible to use.
I really like the old version. Thank you for keeping the old version. I like to have a sidebar of all the repos that I have so that I can quickly switch to and can also open terminal in whatever repository I choose to.
I couldn't find it in the new client. Just adding my 2c that missing features like update from upstream, compare, the sync button, not having to click things first just to see basic stuff like what repos you have, and the mac-native interface make the 'new' version isn't this just the crappy Windows version brought to Mac?
Glad I found a link to the old version in the meantime. Should be released in 1. See for some discussion about this. I would really appreciate to be able to download the older version compatible with OSX The updater tries to elevate privileges and claims to want to install a 'helper'. I found the update info here: There seems to be a lot of misinterpreting this update.
This is less a sign of it still being available , and more a message to get off the old unsupported version and update to the new version.
In the morning, reelsense! Awesome that you are keeping classic alive! It's much better at highlighting the inline diffs: Very happy to discover that classic is still available!
There's several issues with the new one, many of which are already mentioned here but also the fact that it the classic one seems to rebase on pull automatically as well and the fact this isn't even being considered anytime soon according to response on I just did 2 weeks on the new desktop app and am now back on Classic. I gave it a real try, I really did but the timeline view has proven to be too much for me to give up. Indeed, and the unwillingness to help by the maintainers, who introduced the problem by silently making he old version incompatible with the OS where it previously perfectly worked, is more than sad.
I assure you we have not done anything to deliberately make the old Desktop for Mac incompatible with new OSs. We stopped development of that app almost 2 years ago, so OS updates are more likely to be the reason the old client doesn't work on your OS any longer. We do have others who have stuck around with the older clients, so I'm not confident saying it doesn't work on the current crop of OSs that are out.
Learn more. How to get a copy of an older version of a file in a git repository? Ask Question. Asked 8 years, 10 months ago. Active 2 years, 2 months ago. Viewed 31k times. Is this possible? How can I do this? Improve this question.
Possible duplicate of Is there a quick Git command to see an old version of a file? Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Improve this answer. Note that, unlike many other git commands, the filename here "file. Multiple repositories Cloning repositories Examine the cloned repository What is origin? Remote branches Changing the original repository Fetching changes Merging pulled changes Pulling and merging changes Adding a tracking branch Bare repos Adding a remote repository Submitting changes Removing common changes Placing your git repository Sharing repositories Thank you!
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