tigrc(5)
NAME
tigrc - Tig configuration file
SYNOPSIS
set variable = value
bind keymap key action
color area fgcolor bgcolor [attributes]
source path
DESCRIPTION
You can permanently set an option by putting it in the ~/.tigrc file.
The file consists of a series of commands. Each line of the file may
contain only one command. Commands can span multiple lines if each line
is terminated by a backslash (\) character.
The hash mark (#) is used as a comment character. All text after the
comment character to the end of the line is ignored. You can use
comments to annotate your initialization file.
Certain options can be manipulated at runtime via the option menu. In
addition, options can also be toggled with the :toggle prompt command
or by entering the configuration command into the prompt.
GIT CONFIGURATION
Alternatively to using ~/.tigrc, Tig options can be set by putting them
in one of the Git configuration files, which are read by Tig on
startup. See git-config(1) for which files to use. The following
example show the basic syntax to use for settings, bindings and colors.
[tig] show-changes = true
[tig "color"] cursor = yellow red bold
[tig "bind"] generic = P parent
In addition to tig-specific options, the following Git options are read
from the Git configuration:
color.*
Colors for the various UI types. Can be configured via the
git-colors setting.
core.abbrev
The width of the commit ID. See also id-width option.
core.editor
The editor command. Can be overridden by setting GIT_EDITOR.
core.worktree
The path to the root of the working tree.
gui.encoding
The encoding to use for displaying of file content.
i18n.commitencoding
The encoding used for commits. The default is UTF-8.
SET COMMAND
A few selective variables can be configured via the set command. The
syntax is:
set variables = value
Examples:
set commit-order = topo # Order commits topologically
set git-colors = no # Do not read Git's color settings.
set horizontal-scroll = 33% # Scroll 33% of the view width
set blame-options = -C -C -C # Blame lines from other files
# Wrap branch names with () and tags with <>
set reference-format = (branch) <tag>
# Configure blame view columns using command spanning multiple lines.
set blame-view = \
date:default \
author:abbreviated \
file-name:auto \
id:yes,color \
line-number:yes,interval=5 text
Or in the Git configuration files:
[tig]
line-graphics = no # Disable graphics characters
tab-size = 8 # Number of spaces per tab
The type of variables is either bool, int, string, or mixed.
Valid bool values
To set a bool variable to true use either "1", "true", or "yes".
Any other value will set the variable to false.
Valid int values
A non-negative integer.
Valid string values
A string of characters. Optionally, use either ' or " as
delimiters.
Valid mixed values
These values are composites of the above types. The valid values
are specified in the description.
Variables
The following variables can be set:
diff-options (string)
A space separated string of diff options to use in the diff view.
git-show(1) is used for formatting and always passes
--patch-with-stat. This option overrides any options specified in
the TIG_DIFF_OPTS environment variable (described in tig(1)), but
is itself overridden by diff flags given on the command line
invocation.
blame-options (string)
A space separated string of default blame options. Can be used for
telling git-blame(1) how to detect the origin of lines. The options
are ignored when Tig is started in blame mode and given blame
options on the command line.
log-options (string)
A space separated string of default options that should be passed
to the git-log(1) command used by the log view. Options can be
overridden by command line options. Used internally override custom
'pretty.format' settings that break the log view.
main-options (string)
A space separated string of default options that should be passed
to the git-log(1) command used by the main view. Options can be
overridden by command line options.
reference-format (string)
A space separated string of format strings used for formatting
reference names. Wrap the name of the reference type with the
characters you would like to use for formatting, e.g. [tag] and
<remote>. If no format is specified for local-tag, the format for
tag is used. Similarly, if no format is specified for
tracked-remote the remote format is used. Prefix with hide: to not
show that reference type, e.g. hide:remote. Supported reference
types are:
* head : The current HEAD.
* tag : A signed tag.
* local-tag : An unsigned tag.
* remote : A remote.
* tracked-remote : The remote tracked by current HEAD.
* replace : A replaced reference.
* branch : Any other reference.
line-graphics (mixed) [ascii|default|utf-8|<bool>]
What type of character graphics for line drawing.
horizontal-scroll (mixed)
Interval to scroll horizontally in each step. Can be specified
either as the number of columns, e.g. 5, or as a percentage of the
view width, e.g. 33%, where the maximum is 100%. For percentages
it is always ensured that at least one column is scrolled. The
default is to scroll 50% of the view width.
git-colors (list)
A space separated list of "key=value" pairs where the key is a Git
color name and the value is a Tig color name, e.g.
"branch.current=main-head" and "grep.filename=grep.file". Set to
"no" to disable.
show-notes (mixed) [<reference>|<bool>]
Whether to show notes for a commit. When set to a note reference
the reference is passed to git show --notes=. Notes are enabled by
default.
show-changes (bool)
Whether to show staged and unstaged changes in the main view.
vertical-split (mixed) [auto|<bool>]
Whether to split the view horizontally or vertically. "auto" (which
is the default) means that it will depend on the window dimensions.
When true vertical orientation is used, and false sets the
orientation to horizontal.
split-view-height (mixed)
The height of the bottom view in a horizontally split display. Can
be specified either as the number of rows, e.g. 5, or as a
percentage of the view height, e.g. 80%, where the maximum is
100%. It is always ensured that the smaller of the views is at
least four rows high. The default is 67%.
split-view-width (mixed)
Width of the right-most view in a vertically split display. Can be
specified either as the number of column, e.g. 5, or as a
percentage of the view width, e.g. 80%, where the maximum is 100%.
It is always ensured that the smaller of the views is at least four
columns wide. The default is 50%.
status-untracked-dirs (bool)
Show untracked directories contents in the status view (analog to
git ls-files --directory option). On by default.
tab-size (int)
Number of spaces per tab. The default is 8 spaces.
diff-context (int)
Number of context lines to show for diffs.
ignore-space (mixed) [no|all|some|at-eol|<bool>]
Ignore space changes in diff view. By default no space changes are
ignored. Changing this to "all", "some" or "at-eol" is equivalent
to passing "--ignore-all-space", "--ignore-space" or
"--ignore-space-at-eol" respectively to git diff or git show.
commit-order (enum) [auto|default|topo|date|author-date|reverse]
Commit ordering using the default (chronological reverse) order,
topological order, date order or reverse order. When set to "auto"
(which is the default), topological order is automatically used in
the main view when the commit graph is enabled. In repositories
with a long commit history it is advised to set this option to
"default" to speed up loading of the main view.
ignore-case (bool)
Ignore case in searches. By default, the search is case sensitive.
mailmap (bool)
Read canonical name and email addresses for authors and committers
from .mailmap. Off by default. See git-shortlog(1).
wrap-lines (bool)
Wrap long lines. By default, lines are not wrapped. Not compatible
with line numbers enabled.
focus-child (bool)
Whether to focus the child view when it is opened. When disabled
the focus will remain in the parent view, avoiding reloads of the
child view when navigating the parent view. True by default.
editor-line-number (bool)
Whether to pass the selected line number to the editor command. The
line number is passed as +<line-number> in front of the file name.
Example: vim +10 tig.c
mouse (bool)
Whether to enable mouse support. Off by default since it makes
selecting text from the terminal less intuitive. When enabled hold
down Shift (or Option on Mac) to select text. Mouse support
requires that ncurses itself support mouse events.
mouse-scroll (int)
Interval to scroll up or down using the mouse. The default is 3
lines. Mouse support requires that ncurses itself support mouse
events and that you have enabled mouse support in ~/.tigrc with set
mouse = true.
refresh-mode (mixed) [manual|auto|after-command|periodic|<bool>]
Configures how views are refreshed based on modifications to
watched files in the repository. When set to manual, nothing is
refreshed automatically. When set to auto, views are refreshed when
a modification is detected. When set to after-command only refresh
after returning from an external command. When set to periodic,
visible views are refreshed periodically using refresh-interval.
refresh-interval (int)
Interval in seconds between view refresh update checks when
refresh-mode is set to periodic.
file-args (args)
Command line arguments referring to files. These are filtered using
git-rev-parse(1).
rev-args (args)
Command line arguments referring to revisions. These are filtered
using git-rev-parse(1).
View settings
The view settings define the order and options for the different
columns of a view. Each view setting expects a space separated list of
column specifications. Column specifications starts with the column
type, and can optionally be followed by a colon (:) and a list of
column options. E.g. the following column specification defines an
author column displaying the author email and with a maximum width of
20 characters: author:email,width=20.
The first option value in a column specification is always the display
option. When no display value is given, yes is assumed. For display
options expecting an enumerated value this will automatically resolve
to the default enum value. For example, file-name will automatically
have its display setting resolve to auto.
Specifications can also be given for a single column, for example to
override the defaults in the system tigrc file. To override a single
column, use the column name as a suffix after the view setting name,
e.g. main-view-date will allow to set the date in the main view.
Examples:
# Enable both ID and line numbers in the blame view
set blame-view = date:default author:full file-name:auto id:yes,color \
line-number:yes,interval=5 text
# Change grep view to be similar to `git grep` format
set grep-view = file-name:yes line-number:yes,interval=1 text
# Show file sizes as units
set tree-view = line-number:no,interval=5 mode author:full \
file-size:units date:default id:no file-name
# Show line numbers for every 10th line in the pager view
set pager-view = line-number:yes,interval=10 text
# Shorthands to change view settings for a previously defined column
set main-view-date = custom
set main-view-date-format = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M"
set blame-view-line-number = no
# Use Git's default commit order, even when the commit graph is enabled.
set commit-order = default
The following list shows which the available view settings and what
column types they support:
blob-view, diff-view, log-view, pager-view, stage-view
line-number, text
blame-view
author, date, file-name, id, line-number, text
grep-view
file-name, line-number, text
main-view
author, date, commit-title, id, line-number
refs-view
author, date, commit-title, id, line-number, ref
stash-view
author, date, commit-title, id, line-number
status-view
file-name, line-number, status
tree-view
author, date, id, file-name, file-size, line-number, mode
Supported column types and their respective column options:
author
* display (mixed) [full|abbreviated|email|email-user|<bool>]: How
to display author names. If set to "abbreviated" author
initials will be shown.
* width (int): Width of the column. When set to a value between 1
and 10, the author name will be abbreviated to the author's
initials. When set to zero, the width is automatically sized to
fit the content.
commit-title
* graph (mixed) [no|v2|v1]: Whether to show the revision graph in
the main view on start-up. "v1" refers to the old graph
rendering, which is less accurate but faster and thus
recommended in large repositories. See also the line-graphics
options.
* refs (bool): Whether to show references (branches, tags, and
remotes) in the main view. Can be toggled.
* overflow (bool or int): Whether to highlight text in commit
titles exceeding a given width. When set to a boolean, it
enables or disables the highlighting using the default width of
50 character. When set to an int, the assigned value is used as
the maximum character width.
date
* display (mixed)
[relative|relative-compact|custom|default|<bool>]: How to
display dates. If set to "relative" or "relative-compact" a
relative date will be used, e.g. "2 minutes ago" or "2m". If
set to "custom", the strftime(3) string format specified in the
"format" option is used.
* local (bool): If true, use localtime(3) to convert to local
timezone. Note that relative dates always use local offsets.
* format (string): format string to pass to strftime(3) when
custom display mode has been selected.
* width (int): Width of the column. When set to zero, the width
is automatically sized to fit the content.
file-name
* display (mixed) [auto|always|<bool>]: When to display file
names. If set to "auto" file names are shown only when needed,
e.g. when running: tig blame -C <file>.
* width (int): Width of the column. When set to zero, the width
is automatically sized to fit the content.
file-size
* display (mixed) [default|units|<bool>]: How to display file
sizes. When set to "units", sizes are shown using binary
prefixes, e.g. 12524 bytes is shown as "12.2K".
* width (int): Width of the filename column. When set to zero,
the width is automatically sized to fit the content.
id
* display (bool): Whether to show commit IDs in the main view.
* width (int) : Width of the commit ID. When unset Tig will use
the value of core.abbrev if found. See git-config(1) on how to
set core.abbrev. When set to zero the width is automatically
sized to fit the content of reflog (e.g. ref/stash@{4}) IDs
and otherwise default to 7.
line-number
* display (bool): Whether to show line numbers.
* interval (int): Interval between line numbers.
* width (int): Width of the column. When set to zero, the width
is automatically sized to fit the content.
mode
* display (bool): Whether to show file modes.
* width (int): Width of the column. When set to zero, the width
is automatically sized to fit the content.
ref
* display (bool): Whether to show the reference name.
* width (int): Width of the column. When set to zero, the width
is automatically sized to fit the content.
status
* display (mixed) [no|short|long|<bool>]: How to display the
status label.
* width (int): Width of the column. When set to zero, the width
is automatically sized to fit the content.
text
* commit-title-overflow (bool or int): Whether to highlight
commit titles exceeding a given width in the diff view. When
set to a boolean, it enables or disables the highlighting using
the default width of 50 character. When set to an int, the
assigned value is used as the maximum character width.
All column options can be toggled. For display options, use the option
name as the prefix followed by a dash and the column name. E.g. :toggle
author-display will toggle the display option in the author column. For
all other options use the column name followed by a dash and then the
option name as the suffix. E.g. :toggle commit-title-graph will toggle
the graph option in the commit-title column. Alternatively, use the
option menu to manipulate options.
BIND COMMAND
Using bind commands, keys can be mapped to an action when pressed in a
given key map. The syntax is:
bind keymap key action
Examples:
# Add keybinding to quickly jump to the next diff chunk in the stage view
bind stage <Enter> :/^@@
# Disable the default mapping for running git-gc
bind generic G none
# User-defined external command to amend the last commit
bind status + !git commit --amend
# User-defined internal command that reloads ~/.tigrc
bind generic S :source ~/.tigrc
# UTF8-encoded characters can be used as key values.
bind generic @sh -c "printf '%s' %(commit) | pbcopy"
Or in the Git configuration files:
[tig "bind"]
# 'unbind' the default quit key binding
main = Q none
# Cherry-pick current commit onto current branch
generic = C !git cherry-pick %(commit)
Keys are mapped by first searching the keybindings for the current
view, then the keybindings for the generic keymap, and last the default
keybindings. Thus, the view keybindings override the generic
keybindings which override the built-in keybindings.
Keymaps
Valid keymaps are: main, diff, log, help, pager, status, stage,
tree, blob, blame, refs, stash, grep and generic. Use generic to
set key mapping in all keymaps. Use search to define keys for
navigating search results during search.
Key values
Key values should never be quoted. Use either an ASCII or
UTF8-encoded character or one of the following symbolic key names.
Symbolic key names are case insensitive and starts with "<" and
ends with ">". Use <Hash> to bind to the # key, since the hash mark
is used as a comment character. Use <LessThan> to bind to the <
key.
<Enter>, <Space>, <Backspace>, <Tab>, <Escape> or <Esc>, <Left>,
<Right>, <Up>, <Down>, <Insert> or <Ins>, <Delete> or <Del>, <Hash>,
<LessThan> or <LT>, <Home>, <End>, <PageUp> or <PgUp>, <PageDown> or
<PgDown>, <F1>, <F2>, <F3>, <F4>, <F5>, <F6>, <F7>, <F8>, <F9>, <F10>,
<F11>, <F12>.
To define key mappings with the Ctrl key, use <Ctrl-key>. In addition,
key combos consisting of an initial Escape key followed by a normal key
value can be bound using <Esc>key.
Examples:
bind main R refresh
bind main <Down> next
bind main <Ctrl-f> scroll-page-down
bind main <Esc>o options
Note that due to the way ncurses encodes Ctrl key mappings, Ctrl-m and
Ctrl-i cannot be bound as they conflict with Enter and Tab
respectively. Furthermore, ncurses does not allow to distinguish
between Ctrl-f and Ctrl-F. Finally, Ctrl-z is automatically used for
process control and will suspend Tig and open a subshell (use fg to
reenter Tig).
Actions
Actions are either specified as user-defined commands (external or
internal) or using action names as described in the following
sections.
External user-defined command
These actions start with one or more of the following option flags
followed by the command that should be executed.
! Run the command in the
foreground with output
shown.
@ Run the command in the
background with no output.
? Prompt the user before
executing the command.
< Exit Tig after executing
the command.
Unless otherwise specified, commands are run in the foreground with
their console output shown (as if ! was specified). When multiple
command options are specified their behavior are combined, e.g. "?<git
commit" will prompt the user whether to execute the command and will
exit Tig after completion.
Browsing state variables
User-defined commands can optionally refer to Tig's internal state
using the following variable names, which are substituted before
commands are run:
%(head) The currently viewed head
ID. Defaults to HEAD
%(commit) The currently selected
commit ID.
%(blob) The currently selected
blob ID.
%(branch) The currently selected
branch name.
%(remote) The currently selected
remote name. For remote
branches %(branch) will
contain the branch name.
%(tag) The currently selected tag
name.
%(stash) The currently selected
stash name.
%(directory) The current directory path
in the tree view or "." if
undefined.
%(file) The currently selected
file.
%(lineno) The currently selected
line number. Defaults to
0.
%(ref) The reference given to
blame or HEAD if
undefined.
%(revargs) The revision arguments
passed on the command
line.
%(fileargs) The file arguments passed
on the command line.
%(cmdlineargs) All other options passed
on the command line.
%(diffargs) Options from diff-options
or TIG_DIFF_OPTS used used
by the diff view.
%(blameargs) Options from blame-options
used by the blame view.
%(logargs) Options from log-options
used by the log view.
%(mainargs) Options from main-options
used by the main view.
%(prompt) Prompt for the argument
value. Optionally specify
a custom prompt using
"%(prompt Enter branch
name: )"
%(text) The text of the currently
selected line.
%(repo:head) The name of the checked
out branch, e.g. master
%(repo:head-id) The commit ID of the
checked out branch.
%(repo:remote) The remote associated with
the checked out branch,
e.g. origin/master.
%(repo:cdup) The path to change
directory to the
repository root, e.g. ../
%(repo:prefix) The path prefix of the
current work directory,
e.g subdir/.
%(repo:git-dir) The path to the Git
directory, e.g.
/src/repo/.git.
%(repo:is-inside-work-tree) Whether Tig is running
inside a work tree, either
true or false.
Examples:
# Save save the current commit as a patch file when the user selects a
# commit in the main view and presses 'S'.
bind main S !git format-patch -1 %(commit)
# Create and checkout a new branch; specify custom prompt
bind main B ?git checkout -b "%(prompt Enter new branch name: )"
Advanced shell-like commands
If your command requires use of dynamic features, such as
subshells, expansion of environment variables and process control,
this can be achieved by using a shell command:
Example 1. Configure a binding to copy the current commit ID to the
clipboard.
bind generic I @sh -c "echo -n %(commit) | xclip -selection c"
Or by using a combination of Git aliases and Tig external commands.
The following example entries can be put in either the .gitconfig
or .git/config file:
Example 2. Git configuration which binds Tig keys to Git command
aliases.
[alias]
gitk-bg = !"gitk HEAD --not $(git rev-parse --remotes) &"
publish = !"for i in origin public; do git push $i; done"
[tig "bind"]
# @-prefix means that the console output will not be shown.
generic = V !@git gitk-bg
generic = > !git publish
Internal user-defined commands
Actions beginning with a : will be run and interpreted as internal
commands and act similar to commands run via Tig's prompt. Valid
internal commands are configuration file options (as described in this
document) and pager view commands. Examples:
# Reload ~/.tigrc when 'S' is pressed
bind generic S :source .tigrc
# Change diff view to show all commit changes regardless of file limitations
bind diff F :set diff-options = --full-diff
# Show the output of git-reflog(1) in the pager view
bind generic W :!git reflog
# Search for previous diff (c)hunk and next diff header
bind stage 2 :?^@@
bind stage D :/^diff --(git|cc)
bind main I :toggle id # Show/hide the ID column
bind diff D :toggle diff-options --minimal # Use minimal diff algorithm
bind diff [ :toggle diff-context -3 # Decrease context (-U arg)
bind diff ] :toggle diff-context +3 # Increase context
bind generic V :toggle split-view-height -10% # Decrease split height
Similar to external commands, pager view commands can contain variable
names that will be substituted before the command is run.
Action names
Valid action names are described below. Note, all action names are
case-insensitive, and you may use -, _, and . interchangeably, e.g.
"view-main", "View.Main", and "VIEW_MAIN" are the same.
View switching
view-main Show main view
view-diff Show diff view
view-log Show log view
view-tree Show tree view
view-blob Show blob view
view-blame Show blame view
view-refs Show refs view
view-status Show status view
view-stage Show stage view
view-stash Show stash view
view-grep Show grep view
view-pager Show pager view
view-help Show help view
View manipulation
enter Enter and open selected
line
back Go back to the previous
view state
next Move to next
previous Move to previous
parent Move to parent
view-next Move focus to the next
view
refresh Reload and refresh view
maximize Maximize the current view
view-close Close the current view
quit Close all views and quit
View specific actions
status-update Stage/unstage chunk or
file changes
status-revert Revert chunk or file
changes
status-merge Merge file using external
tool
stage-update-line Stage/unstage single line
stage-split-chunk Split current diff chunk
Cursor navigation
move-up Move cursor one line up
move-down Move cursor one line down
move-page-down Move cursor one page down
move-page-up Move cursor half a page up
move-half-page-down Move cursor half a page
down
move-half-page-up Move cursor one page up
move-first-line Move cursor to first line
move-last-line Move cursor to last line
Scrolling
scroll-line-up Scroll one line up
scroll-line-down Scroll one line down
scroll-page-up Scroll one page up
scroll-page-down Scroll one page down
scroll-first-col Scroll to the first line
columns
scroll-left Scroll two columns left
scroll-right Scroll two columns right
Searching
search Search the view
search-back Search backwards in the
view
find-next Find next search match
find-prev Find previous search match
Misc
edit Open in editor
prompt Open the prompt
options Open the options menu
screen-redraw Redraw the screen
stop-loading Stop all loading views
show-version Show version information
none Do nothing
COLOR COMMAND
Color commands control highlighting and the user interface styles. If
your terminal supports color, these commands can be used to assign
foreground and background combinations to certain areas. Optionally, an
attribute can be given as the last parameter. The syntax is:
color area fgcolor bgcolor [attributes]
Examples:
# Override the default terminal colors to white on black.
color default white black
# Diff colors
color diff-header yellow default
color diff-index blue default
color diff-chunk magenta default
color "Reported-by:" green default
# View specific color
color tree.date black cyan bold
Or in the Git configuration files:
[tig "color"]
# A strange looking cursor line
cursor = red default underline
# UI colors
title-blur = white blue
title-focus = white blue bold
# View specific color
[tig "color.tree"]
date = cyan default bold
Area names
Can be either a built-in area name or a custom quoted string. The
latter allows custom color rules to be added for lines matching a
quoted string. Valid built-in area names are described below. Note,
all names are case-insensitive, and you may use -, and _
interchangeably, e.g. "Diff-Header" and "DIFF_HEADER" are the same.
View specific colors can be defined by prefixing the view name to
the area name, e.g. "stage.diff-chunk" and "diff.diff-chunk".
Color names
Valid colors include: white, black, green, magenta, blue, cyan,
yellow, red, default. Use default to refer to the default terminal
colors, for example, to keep the background transparent when you
are using a terminal with a transparent background.
Colors can also be specified using the keywords color0, color1,
..., colorN-1 (where N is the number of colors supported by your
terminal). This is useful when you remap the colors for your
display or want to enable colors supported by 88-color and
256-color terminals. Note that the color prefix is optional. If you
prefer, you can specify colors directly by their numbers 0, 1, ...,
N-1 instead, just like in the configuration file of Git.
Attribute names
Valid attributes include: normal, blink, bold, dim, reverse,
standout, and underline. Note, not all attributes may be supported
by the terminal.
UI colors
The colors and attributes to be used for the text that is not
highlighted or that specify the use of the default terminal colors can
be controlled by setting the default color option.
Table 1. General
default Override default terminal
colors (see above).
cursor The cursor line.
status The status window showing
info messages.
title-focus The title window for the
current view.
title-blur The title window of any
backgrounded view.
search-result Highlighted search result.
delimiter Delimiter shown for
truncated lines.
header The view header lines. Use
status.header to color the
staged, unstaged, and
untracked sections in the
status view. Use
help.header to color the
keymap sections in the
help view.
line-number Line numbers.
id The commit ID.
date The author date.
author The commit author.
mode The file mode holding the
permissions and type.
overflow Title text overflow.
directory The directory name.
file The file name.
file-size File size.
Table 2. Main view colors
graph-commit The commit dot in the
revision graph.
palette-[0-13] 14 different colors, used
for distinguishing
branches or commits. By
default, the palette uses
the ASCII colors, where
the second half of them
have the bold attribute
enabled to give a brighter
color. Example: palette-0
= red
main-commit The commit comment.
main-head Label of the current
branch.
main-remote Label of a remote.
main-tracked Label of the remote
tracked by the current
branch.
main-tag Label of a signed tag.
main-local-tag Label of a local tag.
main-ref Label of any other
reference.
main-replace Label of replaced
reference.
Table 3. Status view
stat-none Empty status label.
stat-staged Status flag of staged
files.
stat-unstaged Status flag of unstaged
files.
stat-untracked Status flag of untracked
files.
Table 4. Help view
help-group Help group name.
help-action Help action name.
Highlighting
Diff markup
Options concerning diff start, chunks and lines added and deleted.
diff-header, diff-chunk, diff-add, diff-add2, diff-del, diff-del2
Enhanced Git diff markup
Extra diff information emitted by the Git diff machinery, such as
mode changes, rename detection, and similarity.
diff-oldmode, diff-newmode, diff-copy-from, diff-copy-to,
diff-similarity, diff-index
Pretty print commit headers
Commit diffs and the revision logs are usually formatted using
pretty printed headers , unless --pretty=raw was given. This
includes lines, such as merge info, commit ID, and author and
committer date.
pp-refs, pp-reflog, pp-reflogmsg, pp-merge
Raw commit header
Usually shown when --pretty=raw is given, however commit is pretty
much omnipresent.
commit, parent, tree, author, committer
Commit message
Signed-off-by, Acked-by, Reviewed-by and Tested-by lines are
colorized. Characters in the commit title exceeding a predefined
width can be highlighted.
Tree markup
Colors for information of the tree view.
tree-dir, tree-file
SOURCE COMMAND
Source commands make it possible to read additional configuration
files. Sourced files are included in-place, meaning when a source
command is encountered the file will be immediately read. Any commands
later in the current configuration file will take precedence. The
syntax is:
source path
Examples:
source ~/.tig/colorscheme.tigrc
source ~/.tig/keybindings.tigrc
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2006-2014 Jonas Fonseca <jonas.fonseca@gmail.com[1]>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
option) any later version.
SEE ALSO
tig(1), tigmanual(7), git(7), git-config(1)
NOTES
1. jonas.fonseca@gmail.com
mailto:jonas.fonseca@gmail.com
Free and Open Source Software