summitech / gitexplorer

Find the right git commands without digging through the web.
MIT License
1.84k stars 160 forks source link
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GitExplorer

Table of Contents

Intro

Tech Stack

Installation

Makers

Contribute

Donate

RoadMap

Intro

Last year, we came across Sarah Drasner's array explorer. It is a really cool resource for anyone to easily figure out the best JS array method to use. We loved it and decided to build something similar for Git.

Website: Click to find the right git commands without digging through the web.

Explore and Enjoy!

You can reach us on the official git explorer twitter handle or on Summitech's twitter handle.

Tech Stack

Installation

yarn (Install all dependencies)

yarn start

To try GitExplorer in a docker container, run this:

docker-compose up

Makers

Awesome devs and designer at Summitech

Contribute

Thank you for contributing to GitExplorer!

Please follow the below instructions to send a Pull Request (Search the website to make sure that this command doesn't already exist).

The data folder (inside the src directory) is where you will be operating from. The three files you should be concerned with are the primary-options.js, secondary-options.js and tertiary-options.js files.

These three files are responsible for the options a user can pick.

primary-options.js contains an array of objects responsible for the options of the first select box. secondary-options.js contains an object. This object houses an arrays of objects (a mouthful :smile:), this is responsible for the second set of options a user sees when they select a primary option. tertiary-option.js file is responsible for cases where there needs to be a third & final select box.

Steps to add a new command
  1. Please ensure you are not on the master branch. Checkout to a new branch entirely.
  2. Add an object to the array in the primary-options.js file. Sample Format:
    { value: 'show', label: 'show/view' }
  3. Add an array to the secondary-options file. Sample Format:

    show: [
    {
      value: 'repo-status',
      label: 'status of project including staged, unstaged and untracked files',
      usage: 'git status'
      nb: 'To know about this command, "run git status --help"'
    },
    {
      value: 'logs',
      label: 'commit logs/history'
    },

    The nb is optional. It is responsible for what the user sees in the notes section.

    \n is used to insert newline.

    1. To add tertiary options, remove the usage and nb key/value pair for that command in the secondary-options.js file e.g..
    show: [
    {
      value: 'logs',
      label: 'commit logs/history'
    },

    then supply tertiary-options.js file the necessary data e.g.

    logs: [
    {
      value: 'all',
      label: 'all',
      usage: 'git log',
      nb: 'Type q in the terminal to exit the logs'
    },
    {
      value: 'last-n-commit',
      label: 'for last xxx number of commits',
      usage: 'git log -n',
      nb: 'Replace n with number of commits e.g. git log -2'
    },
    {
      value: 'particular-period',
      label: 'since a particular period',
      usage: 'git log --since=period',
      nb: 'Replace period with intended timeframe e.g git log --since=3days. You can use dates like 2018-12-31.\n\n Similar flags are --until, --before, --after'
    }
    ]
  4. Once you are done, add, commit, push and create a PR to Master.

Donate

You can also contribute to the continued success of the project via donation. Please click this link.

RoadMap