![]() ![]() I’ll see if I can reproduce it.Įdit2: Ok, I restarted SM and my settings are back. I almost wish it wouldn’t remember my fullscreen setting.Įdit: Welp, after saying that, I went to check my SM settings to see if I had a “remember_full_screen” or similar setting, and it looks like all my settings are gone, so I/we may have just found a bug. Then I use (on macOS) desktop switching (two-finger-swipe, or super+tab) to get to my dedicated workspace with the right app (Sublime Text, Sublime Merge, etc).Īnyway, we’re much closer with this, but still not completely there!įor now, I just merge all windows again manually and fullscreen. ![]() This works exceptionally well, as it keeps my applications consolidated, and maximizes screen Realestate, and doesn’t compete with other apps for visual attention. This is unfortunate, because typically how I work is a tab up my one window, full screen it, and then use quick switching on the keyboard (Super+Shift+O) to bounce between projects. Sublime Merge will not remember tabs if you fullscreen any window. I can confirm that it does partially work. Summing up, if you’d improve the UI to work with many repos while keeping the same speed I’d definitely find no more reasons to continue using SourceTree, for the meantime will still be a non-go Also, each commit having its own collapsable diff on the bottom is not good… in SourceTree you can select multiple files and they will dump their diff on the same view, which leads to a better space usage. Sourcetree allows to select multiple commit items so you’ll be able apply multiple actions through a context menu, I think the choice of not having a context menu and having those 2 buttons/operations on the right of each commit change is an example of bad UI space usage. Sourcetree view is really compact and that will allow you to spot the commit overall status at once very fast on multiple repos easily. Sourcetree view space usage is “smarter” than SM’s. This is the British English definition of. Definition and synonyms of submerge yourself in something from the online English dictionary from Macmillan Education. She wanted to submerge herself in her writing. With SourceTree you can organize repos in a tree structure using virtual folders and this is really important when your daily job involves dealing with many dozens if not hundreds of repos in the workspace. to become very involved in something so that you do not think about anything else. On the other hand, I must to point out that even if the SM’s speed is amazing and there are many UI elements I really like I think UI sourcetree is still better overall, for instance: While with sourcetree almost all operations when dealing with these big repos are slow as hell. With SM you can work nicely with really meaty repos such as Qt’s without breaking a sweat, which it’s truly amazing. Few days ago I’ve tested a bit SublimeMerge and I must to say I’m extremely impressed with the speed that gives this tool in comparison to sourcetree (although I’m using a very old version of ST). ![]()
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