1.2.0 • Published 5 years ago

gitree v1.2.0

Weekly downloads
1
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
5 years ago

gitree

Print a directory tree that shows Git status and ignores files dictated by .gitignore.

$ npm i -g gitree
$ gitree

# OR

$ npx gitree

Example

What?

gitree works very similarly to tree but only lists files related to the current git repository.

Like Git, gitree only tracks files, so empty directories will never be listed. If you wish to push an empty folder to a Git repository, add an empty .gitignore or .gitkeep file to the directory and commit it.

What does it show?

gitree shows any files that your repository's .gitignore files allows you to see, marking them with useful statuses:

Statuses

What if it's not a Git repository?

It won't work. You must be somewhere within a Git repository to list any files. If you just want a basic tree view without Git integration, consider the built-in tree command for Linux/Windows or the tree homebrew formula for Mac OSX.

What else can it do?

Just this stuff:

Usage: gitree [options] [dir]


Options:

  -V, --version   output the version number
  -m, --modified  only show modified files
  -t, --tracked   only show tracked files
  -h, --help      output usage information

Can it get any cooler?

There's a built-in alias, gt. Fantabulous, eh?

1.2.0

5 years ago

1.1.0

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