On 9/5/2014 2:41 AM, Jacob Carlborg wrote:
On 04/09/14 23:46, Nick Sabalausky wrote:

It sounds great, but TBH I'm a little disappointed with it: Without
horizontal scrolling, it's still a huge step backwards from a dedicated
native diff program like Beyond Compare and such. At least they're
improving though.

Gitlab has had split view for diffs as long as I've been using it,
including horizontal scroll.


Hmm, checking out the demo server, that side-by-side diff still doesn't really compare to the non-HTML ones I've used. On the real ones, the horizontal scrollbar is never hidden below the bottom of the window, all the way down at the bottom of the diffed files, like this one is. And the horizontal sizes and positions are normally kept pretty much in sync, unlike these HTML versions.

See this:
http://meldmerge.org/images/meld-filediff-full.png

That's how it should work, and how every real GUI diff tool I've used works. And it's done that way for good reason. The horizontal scroll bar is always right there. And scrolling it will scroll both together, instead of awkwardly scrolling one unified viewport within a larger "document" (which isn't nearly as practical).

By comparison, the GitHub and Gitlab side-by-side diffs both fall squarely into "cute little trick" territory rather than "professional-grade software". Granted, GitHub and Gitlab pretty much have their hands tied on the matter: It would likely be rather difficult, if realistically possible, to make it work right given their constraints. But that's the price they pay for clinging to HTML as their one and only UI.


Although a native, no-HTML version of github would let
them leapfrog years in R&D over their web interface, but oh well.

They do have that, although I have never used it:

OS X: https://mac.github.com/
Windows: https://windows.github.com/


No, I've tried those. Disappointingly, they're not *at all* what they sound like.

You've seen that "Clone via GitHub for Windows" button in every GitHub repo? *That* is pretty much what the whole thing is all about.

JavaScript doesn't give them a way to invoke "git clone ..." on the client's computer, so they made a "program" to let them do it and claimed it was "GitHub on the desktop" (which really isn't true at all). And from what I can tell, it was never even *intended* to be any sort of alternative to the web interface, despite what it sounds like.

They're really nothing more than ordinary Git clients, like TortoiseGit or even "Git GUI", except straitjacketed and not particularly useful. Pretty much anything that GitHub's web interface provides, is still *expected* to be done via the web interface. "GitHub for Win/Mac" doesn't even attempt to provide access to most (any?) of those features.

Again, it's mainly just intended to be a way for "dummies" to clone a GitHub repo. It's a glorified GUI wrapper for "git clone [protocol]:github.com/[repo]" and a few other trivial things.


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