SYNOPSIS

set variable = value bind keymap key action color area fgcolor bgcolor [attributes]

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.

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.

Alternatively, 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.

Set command

A few selective variables can be configured via the set command. The syntax is:

set variables = value

Examples:

set show-author = yes           # Show author?
set show-rev-graph = yes        # Show revision graph?
set show-refs = yes             # Show references?
set show-line-numbers = no      # Show line numbers?
set line-number-interval = 5    # Interval between line numbers
set commit-encoding = "UTF-8"   # Commit encoding
set horizontal-scroll = 33%     # Scroll 33% of the view width

Or in the git configuration files:

[tig]
        show-date = yes         # Show commit date?
        author-width = 10       # Set width of the author column
        line-graphics = no      # Disable graphics characters
        tab-size = 8            # Number of spaces per tab

The type of variables are 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:

show-author (bool)
show-date (bool)
show-rev-graph (bool)
show-refs (bool)

Whether to show author, date, revision graph, and references (branches, tags, and remotes) in the main view on start-up. Can all be toggled.

author-width (int)

Width of the author column. When set to 5 or below, the author name will be abbreviated to the author's initials.

line-graphics (bool)

Whether to use graphic characters for line drawing.

line-number-interval (int)

Interval between line numbers. Note, you have to toggle on line numbering with n or the -n command line option. The default is to number every line.

tab-size (int)

Number of spaces per tab. The default is 8 spaces.

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.

commit-encoding (string)

The encoding used for commits. The default is UTF-8. Not this option is shadowed by the "i18n.commitencoding" option in .git/config.

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:

# A few keybindings
bind main w scroll-line-up
bind main s scroll-line-down
bind main space enter
bind diff a previous
bind diff d next
bind diff b move-first-line
# An external command to update from upstream
bind generic F !git fetch

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 shadow the generic keybindings which Shadow the built-in keybindings.

Keymaps

Valid keymaps are: main, diff, log, help, pager, status, stage, and generic. Use generic to set key mapping in all keymaps.

Key values

Key values should never be quoted. Use either the ASCII value or one of the following symbolic key names. Symbolic key names are case insensitive, Use Hash to bind to the # key, since the hash mark is used as a comment character.

Enter, Space, Backspace, Tab, Escape, Left, Right, Up, Down, Insert, Delete, Hash, Home, End, PageUp, PageDown, F1, F2, F3, F4, F5, F6, F7, F8, F9, F10, F11, F12.

Action names

Valid action names are described below. Note, all names are case-insensitive, and you may use -, _, and . interchangeably, e.g. "view-main", "View.Main", and "VIEW_MAIN" are the same.

Actions

Apart from the action names listed below, all actions starting with a ! will be available as an external command. External commands can contain variable names that will be substituted before the command is run. Valid variable names are:

Browsing state variables
%(head) The currently viewed head ID. Defaults to HEAD
%(commit) The currently selected commit ID.
%(blob) The currently selected blob ID.
%(directory) The current directory path in the tree view; empty for the root directory.
%(file) The currently selected file.
%(ref) The reference given to blame or HEAD if undefined.

As an example, the following external command will save the current commit as a patch file: "!git format-patch -1 %(commit)". If your external command require use of dynamic features, such as subshells, expansion of environment variables and process control, this can be achieved 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:

[alias]
        gitk-bg = !"gitk HEAD --not $(git rev-parse --remotes) &"
        publish = !"for i in origin public; do git push $i; done"
[tig "bind"]
        generic = V !git gitk-bg
        generic = > !git publish
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-status Show status view
view-stage Show stage view
view-pager Show pager view
view-help Show help page
View manipulation:
enter Enter current line and scroll
next Move to next
previous Move to previous
parent Move to parent
view-next Move focus to 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 Update file status
status-merge Resolve unmerged file
stage-next Find next chunk to stage
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 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-left Scroll one column left
scroll-right Scroll one column 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:
prompt Bring up the prompt
screen-redraw Redraw the screen
screen-resize Resize the screen
show-version Show version information
stop-loading Stop all loading views
toggle-lineno Toggle line numbers
toggle-date Toggle date display
toggle-author Toggle author display
toggle-rev-graph Toggle revision graph visualization
toggle-refs Toggle reference display
edit Open in editor
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:

# Overwrite 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

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
Area names

Valid area names are described below. Note, all names are case-insensitive, and you may use -, _, and . interchangeably, e.g. "Diff-Header", "DIFF_HEADER", and "diff.header" are the same.

Color names

Valid colors include: white, black, green, magenta, blue, cyan, yellow, red, default. Use default to refer to the default terminal colors. This is recommended for background colors if you are using a terminal with a transparent background.

Colors can also be specified using the keywords color0, color1, …, colorN-1 (N being 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 256-color terminals.

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.

General:
default Overwrite 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.
delimiter Delimiter shown for truncated lines.
line-number Line numbers.
date The commit date.
author The commit author.
mode The file mode holding the permissions and type.
Main view colors:
main-revgraph The revision graph.
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.
Status view:
stat-head The "On branch"-line.
stat-section Status section titles,
stat-staged Status flag of staged files.
stat-unstaged Status flag of unstaged files.
stat-untracked Status flag of untracked files.
Blame view:
blame-id The commit ID.
Tree view:
tree-head The "Directory /"-line
tree-dir The directory name.
tree-file The file name.

Highlighting

Diff markup

Options concerning diff start, chunks and lines added and deleted.

diff-header, diff-chunk, diff-add, diff-del

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-rename-from, diff-rename-to, diff-similarity, diff-dissimilarity diff-tree, 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-author, pp-commit, pp-merge, pp-date, pp-adate, pp-cdate, pp-refs

Raw commit header

Usually shown when --pretty=raw is given, however commit is pretty much omnipresent.

commit, parent, tree, author, committer

Commit message

For now only Signed-off-by and Acked-by lines are colorized.

signoff, acked

Tree markup

Colors for information of the tree view.

tree-dir, tree-file

Copyright (c) 2006-2009 Jonas Fonseca <fonseca@diku.dk>

Licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License.

SEE ALSO

tig(1), git-config(1), and the tig manual.