Committed

Committed is a WYSIWYG Git commit editor that helps improve the quality of your
commits by showing you the layout in the same format as git log
.


💡 Highlights ⭡
- Built-in multiline editor with rich capabilities.
- Custom emoji selector providing popular sets to choose from.
- Switch author before applying the commit.
- Inline text interface mimics the Git log output.
- Dynamic subject line counter.
- Toggle appending sign-off required by many open source projects.
- Automatically hard wraps body to 72 characters.
- Best practise recommendations.
- Import and amend previous commit.
- Adaptive colours with light and dark themes.
🐾 First Steps ⭡
- Install using Homebrew.
brew install mikelorant/committed/committed
-
Before creating and applying a commit you will need to stage the files you
wish to add with the git add
command.
-
Committed replaces the git commit
command and all you need to do to commit
your change is to run:
committed
It is also possible to amend your previous commit with:
committed --amend
Once the UI has appeared take note of the keyboard shortcuts shown at the bottom
of the interface.
Alt + <enter> Commit <s> Sign-off </> Help Summary <tab>
Ctrl + <c> Cancel Author <tab> + Shift
These shortcuts will help you apply or cancel a commit and navigate between the
different components. Pressing enter on most components will automatically
switch you to the next one.
💬 Purpose ⭡
The benefits of high quality commits are well documented however the tooling to
follow these practises has been lacking. In most cases you are either providing
a single line commit message or forced into a full screen editor which has no
knowledge of recommended Git practises.
It is common to accidentally commit to the wrong branch or use the incorrect
author name. Improving clarity of commits with emojis or detailed messages is
often frustrating.
For many, knowing what makes a good commit is not even thought about.
Committed attempts to solve these problems by first educating on best practises.
It then helps guide and enforce these de factor standards while showing how the
commit will end up being displayed to other users.
The interface does not take over the sceen or force switching to another
application. All actions are done with the keyboard which is consistent with the
Git command which is often used before the actual commit. Having an editor which
allows for more advanced cursor movement and editing assists with revising
rather than accepting what has already been written.
These capabilities all contribute to helping create a commit message that is
useful.
⚠️ Limitations ⭡
Option Key
The option key needs to be set to send the meta
or esc+
keycode. Terminals
such as macOS Terminal or iTerm2 may not have this as default. If not set
correctly it will not be possible to apply a commit.
To make these changes following the instructions below.
Terminal |
Setting |
macOS Terminal |
Profiles Keyboard
 |
iTerm2 |
Preferences Profile Keys
 |
The alternative keyboard shortcut ⌥ Option + \ can also be used to apply
a commit.
Rendering Borders
Terminals render emojis differently and this makes alignment of borders
complicated and difficult. It is an ongoing process to improve the compatibility
with terminals. The following list are the terminals that have been tested.
Other terminals may display correctly and feedback would be appreciated to help
update the list.
Terminal |
Status |
Notes |
macOS Terminal |
✅ |
|
iTerm2 |
✅ |
|
VS Code |
✅ |
|
Hyper |
✅ |
|
Alacritty |
✅ |
|
WezTerm |
✅ |
|
ttyd |
✅ |
Requires compatibility option set. |
kitty |
✅ |
Requires compatibility option set. |
💾 Installation ⭡
Install Committed with Homebrew.
brew install mikelorant/taps/committed
🎛 Usage ⭡
Committed is a WYSIWYG Git commit editor
Usage:
committed [flags]
committed [command]
Available Commands:
completion Generate the autocompletion script for the specified shell
help Help about any command
list List settings with profiles or IDs
version Print the version information
Flags:
--config string Config file location (default
"$HOME/.config/committed/config.yaml")
--snapshot string Snapshot file location (default
"$HOME/.local/state/committed/snapshot.yaml")
--dry-run Simulate applying a commit (default true)
-a, --amend Replace the tip of the current branch by creating a new commit
-h, --help help for committed
-v, --version version for committed
Use "committed [command] --help" for more information about a command.
⚙ Configuration ⭡
No configuration is necessary however there are some values that can be changed
based on preference.
Committed defaults to using a config file located at $HOME/.config/committed/config.yaml
.
view:
# Starting component focus.
# Values: author, emoji, summary
# Default: emoji
focus: emoji
# Emoji selector placement in relation to subject.
# Values: above, below
# Default: below
emojiSelector: below
# Emoji set to use.
# Values: gitmoji, devmoji, emojilog
# Default: gitmoji
emojiSet: gitmoji
# Theme to display. Dark and light backgrounds have different themes.
# Dark values:
# builtin_dark, dracula, gruvbox_dark, nord, retrowave,
# solarized_dark_higher_contrast, tokyo_night
# Dark default: builtin_dark
# Light values:
# builtin_light, gruvbox_light, builtin_solarized_light,
# builtin_tango_light, tokyo_night_light
# Light default: builtin_light
theme: builtin_dark
# Colour profile for displaying themes.
# Values: adaptive, dark, light
# Default: adaptive
colour: adaptive
# Terminal compatibility.
# Values: default, ttyd
# Default: default
compatibility: default
# Highlight active component.
# Value: true, false
# Default: false
highlightActive: false
# Ignore Git global author.
# Value: true, false
# Default: false
ignoreGlobalAuthor: false
commit:
# Emoji format in commit.
# Values: shortcode, character
# Default: shortcode
emojiType: shortcode
# Enable author sign-off for commits.
# Values: true, false
# Default: false
signoff: false
authors:
# List of extra authors.
- name: John Doe
email: john.doe@example.com
Themes
There are a number of themes available that modify the colours. By default, the
background colour is detected which changes the choices of themes. This
detection can be disabled by setting the colour profile in the configuration.
The first theme of each set is the default theme applied.
Dark Themes
Light Theme
Emoji Profiles
Popular emoji sets can be set as the default profile:
🏆 Best Practises ⭡
To create a well formed commit, these are some of the best practises that are
often cited.
Capitalized, short (50 chars or less) summary
More detailed explanatory text, if necessary. Wrap it to about 72
characters or so. In some contexts, the first line is treated as the
subject of an email and the rest of the text as the body. The blank
line separating the summary from the body is critical (unless you omit
the body entirely); tools like rebase can get confused if you run the
two together.
Write your commit message in the imperative: "Fix bug" and not "Fixed bug"
or "Fixes bug." This convention matches up with commit messages generated
by commands like git merge and git revert.
Further paragraphs come after blank lines.
-
Bullet points are okay, too
-
Typically a hyphen or asterisk is used for the bullet, followed by a
single space, with blank lines in between, but conventions vary here
-
Use a hanging indent
Source: Tim Pope
The placeholder text for the summary and body will show these recommendations.
Related links:
⌨ Shortcuts ⭡
The global shortcuts can be used within any view.
Key Binding |
Command |
⌥ Option + ⏎ Enter |
Commit |
⌥ Option + \ |
Commit |
⌥ Option + S |
Toggle sign-off |
⌥ Option + T |
Toggle theme |
⌥ Option + / |
Help |
⌥ Option + 1 |
Focus author |
⌥ Option + 2 |
Focus emoji |
⌥ Option + 3 |
Focus summary |
⌥ Option + 4 |
Focus body |
⌃ Control + C |
Cancel |
⇥ Tab |
Next component |
⇧ Shift + ⇥ Tab |
Previous component |
The emoji shortcuts are limited to the emoji view only.
Key Binding |
Command |
⌫ Delete |
Clear emoji |
⎋ Escape |
Reset filter |
⇟ Page Down |
Next page |
⇞ Page Up |
Previous page |
📚 Tips ⭡
Aliases
Shell or Git aliases can be used to tailor Committed to your preferred workflow.
An example Git alias is as follows:
git config --global alias.co '! committed'
You can then commit changes with:
git co
Amend
There are certain limitations when amending commits and it is recommended only
for use with commits created with Committed. The limitations are:
- Emoji character or shortcode must be in the existing data set.
- Trailers will be imported into the body.
- Summary will be truncated if more than 72 characters.
- Lines will not reflow when editing the body.
✏️ Authors ⭡
🎫 License ⭡
MIT
👍 Thanks ⭡
Thanks to Carlos Cuesta for creating gitmoji and gitmoji-cli which was the
inspiration for this project.
Thanks to Ahmad Awais for Emoji-Log and Folke Lemaitre for Devmoji.
Many thanks to David Ackroyd and Matt Hope for all their guidance with Go.
Without their expertise I would never had the capability to build Committed.
Thanks to all the developers from Charm for their amazing set of libraries.
Committed would never have looked the way it does without Bubble Tea, Lipgloss
and Bubbles.
Thanks to Tim Pope for his Git commit recommendations which was a core
component in the interface design.