Just wanted to give it a try. Sadly doesn't adapt to any UI scaling on Linux and therefor I can't read any text on my Laptop or Screen... Tried to set some values I know from Sublimetext, but sadly this software doesn't seem far enough yet.
Would love to use it though.
@kwiesmuller If you open `~/.config/sublime-merge/Packages/User/Preferences.sublime-settings` and enter `"dpi_scale": 2.0` and restart, that will override what it detects from GTK. On all platforms you can use the `ui_scale` setting to bump up the size of everything.
@kwiesmuller No, Sublime Merge is a proprietary product and source code is not available. It was built on top of the foundations of Sublime Text, our other product, which is also closed source.
Hi @wbond! This doesn't support emojis if I compare it to other tools like Gitkraken. Users of Gitmoji (https://gitmoji.carloscuesta.me) will not find this useful.
@preetesh_jain Right now we are working on ironing out bugs and getting missing features in place so as many users as possible can use Merge in their day-to-day git workflow. If you drop by https://forum.sublimetext.com/c/..., that is the best place to leave feature requests.
Sublime's suite of tools are .... sublime :P ..
But actually, I really enjoy the simplicity of merge and usability. I don't always need to git from a UI, but on occasion it's nice to have a visual helper to solve conflicts or cherry picks.
One of the standouts is the 'show underlying git commands' feature that I use to help me learn crazy git commands.
No more copying over entire folders, recloning, new branch, copy back over and resolve from there.
Of all of the Git clients I've used, this is the only client that keeps the closest parity with the Git tool while keeping a clean and functional UI. I recommend this to all developers new and experienced, because you get to see what flags you're running for each command
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