Recently I started to get rid of plugins to better understand what is going on within my tools.
And I am constantly getting surprised that a lot of fancy stuff we do with 1923+ plugins installed might be already builtin. That’s what I found about git: it has awesome integration with vim and, by extension, with neovim.
I am talking about these commands specifically:
git add -i: Interactive Git Add
git difftool: Tool to Review PRs (or any diffs in general)
git mergetool: Truly amazing tool to merge conflicts without any plugins
If you don’t want to bother yourself with burring in documentation, you can check the new video on my channel where I demonstrate all the commands and their integration with nvim: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvB50FqNurg](https://www.you…
Recently I started to get rid of plugins to better understand what is going on within my tools.
And I am constantly getting surprised that a lot of fancy stuff we do with 1923+ plugins installed might be already builtin. That’s what I found about git: it has awesome integration with vim and, by extension, with neovim.
I am talking about these commands specifically:
git add -i: Interactive Git Add
git difftool: Tool to Review PRs (or any diffs in general)
git mergetool: Truly amazing tool to merge conflicts without any plugins
If you don’t want to bother yourself with burring in documentation, you can check the new video on my channel where I demonstrate all the commands and their integration with nvim: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvB50FqNurg