(3) If I click on Branch, and pretend I want to delete a local branch, the list of branches I am offered has no duplication. That didn't help: whatever branches are left are duplicated. (2) I culled a lot of old local branches from all 4 repos that were "clutter" as far as I was concerned. I upgraded in the hope that it would make it go away. Would have been 2 if not 3 versions behind. (1) Have recently upgraded the Sourcetree. Of the 4, 1 behaves itself while the other 3 duplicate every local branch. Certainly, they are all configured to connect to Sourcetree in the same way. The 4 repos are much the same: nothing about any one of them is inherently different to the other 3 in terms of credentials, git, etc. I have 4 Gitlab repos that I connect Sourcetree to. So, using v2.3.1.0 (latest) on Windows 7. Reach out on our community site and tell us what you think.Sorry for the messed-up posting, not sure why the one screenshot got pasted several times. If Build 2017 is any indication, we’ll replace all panels with transparent blurry “Acrylic.” (Just kidding)Īs always, we’re listening closely to your feedback.Diffs will get nicer colors and layouts.We are exploring more ways to help you manage lots of repositories and stay up-to-date with outstanding push/pulls.View options will be moved to the view menu.The committer info panel will be cleaned up.The awkward footer tabs will be grouped in sidebar, like the Mac App.So what’s next? Here’s a look at where SourceTree is headed. If you’re familiar with how to open a new tab in a browser, you’re familiar with SourceTree. Because we were already using tabs, adding a plus button was a natural fit. It became clear that repository lists needed their own dedicated experience. The remote repository listing was disconnected and hard to find.The bookmarks pane took up a lot of valuable screen space, but was seldom used once the repositories were open in tabs.There wasn’t enough horizontal space to read the name of the repository in a narrow vertical layout.Many first-time users would struggle cloning or opening repositories.Through testing and feedback, we learned just how much of a pain the bookmarks pane was. We’re moving toward a more logical and simple layout with more room to review your code. As you can see, things were pretty cluttered before. Here we can see a sort of “topological map” of the various UI panes, charting where we’ve been and where we’re going. We’ve swapped those panels so that tabs now live at the top of the hierarchy, much like browser experiences that you are no doubt familiar with. The toolbar sat above everything else in the UI, but it only really belonged to the open repo (tab). The Windows App always used tabs for navigating between open repositories, but we knew that those tabs weren’t quite right. To this end, we’ve brought some much needed consistency and simplicity to the interface. In this release, we’ve continued to address the number one customer feedback theme: UI complexity. SourceTree 2.0 brings massive wins not only for performance, but for design. Windows 2.0 gets a fresh look By Joel Unger on May 18, 2017
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |