gg is an alternative command-line interface for Git heavily inspired by Mercurial. It's designed for less typing in common workflows and make Git easier to use for both novices and advanced users alike.
- Abbreviations.
git commit -a
takes 13 characters to type.gg ci
takes 5 to do the same thing. Don't worry, you can still typegg commit
: most common operations have shorter aliases. - Built for GitHub and Gerrit. gg has built-in support for creating pull requests and creating Gerrit changesets straight from the command-line. No more context switching.
- Safer rebases.
gg rebase
automatically detects common mistakes while rebasing and infers the correct change. - Local branches match remote branches. Using
gg pull
automatically creates branches that match your remotes to avoid confusion. - Optional staging. gg avoids using the staging area to save on typing and mistakes. However, gg takes great care to avoid perturbing the staging area, so for more advanced commits, you can keep using the same Git commands you're used to.
- Works with existing Git tools. You can use or not use gg as much as you
want in your workflow. gg is just a wrapper for the Git CLI, so it works with
any hooks or custom patches to Git that your project may use. You can see the
exact Git commands gg runs by passing in
--show-git
.
Learn more at gg-scm.io.
Read the installation guide for the most up-to-date information on how to obtain gg. To build from source, follow the instructions in CONTRIBUTING.md.
Apache 2.0. This is not an official Google product.
gg depends on golang.org/x/sys
, which is released under a BSD license.