Differences between revisions 29 and 44 (spanning 15 versions)
Revision 29 as of 2010-08-06 11:12:22
Size: 1313
Editor: abuehl
Comment: +ad-free, working, download link
Revision 44 as of 2022-03-13 23:12:56
Size: 1605
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
{{attachment:thg_logo_92x50.png}} ''See project homepage http://tortoisehg.org for more information'' = TortoiseHg =
Line 3: Line 3:
TortoiseHg is a set of graphical tools and a shell extension for Mercurial. {{attachment:thg_logo_92x50.png}}
Line 5: Line 5:
 On Windows:: TortoiseHg consists of a shell extension, which provides overlay icons and context menus in your file explorer, and a command line program named `hgtk.exe` which can launch the TortoiseHg tools. Binary packages of TortoiseHg for Windows include Mercurial, TortoisePlink and a merge tool and are thus completely ready for use “Out of the Box”.
 On Linux:: TortoiseHg consists of a command line hgtk script and a Nautilus extension which provides overlays and context menus in your file explorer. You must have Mercurial installed separately in order to run TortoiseHg on Linux. TortoiseHg binary packages list Mercurial as a dependency, so it is usually installed for you automatically.
[[https://foss.heptapod.net/mercurial/tortoisehg/thg|TortoiseHg]] /* I think the old website (https://tortoisehg.bitbucket.io/) was not yet migrated, so linking to the new repo seems best for now, to not make people think the project is dead */ is a set of graphical tools and a shell extension for Mercurial.
Line 8: Line 7:
TortoiseHg is primarily written in Python and !PyGtk (the Windows shell extension being the notable exception). The hgtk script and TortoiseHg dialogs can be used on any platform that supports !PyGtk, including Mac OS X.  On Windows:: TortoiseHg consists of a shell extension, which provides overlay icons and context menus in your file explorer, and a command line program named `thg.exe` which can launch the TortoiseHg tools. Binary packages of TortoiseHg for Windows include Mercurial, TortoisePlink and a merge tool and are thus completely ready for use “Out of the Box”.
Line 10: Line 9:
Online documentation is available at: http://tortoisehg.bitbucket.org/docs.html  On Linux:: TortoiseHg consists of a command line thg script and a Nautilus extension which provides overlays and context menus in your file explorer. You must have Mercurial installed separately in order to run TortoiseHg on Linux. TortoiseHg binary packages list Mercurial as a dependency, so it is usually installed for you automatically.
Line 12: Line 11:
Download: http://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/stable/downloads/ TortoiseHg is primarily written in Python and !PyQt (the Windows shell extension being the notable exception). The thg script and TortoiseHg dialogs can be used on any platform that supports !PyQt, including Mac OS X.
Line 14: Line 13:
See also: __OtherTools__ Online documentation is available at: https://tortoisehg.readthedocs.io/ (the English version is most up to date, but it's available in more languages).

Download: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/release/tortoisehg/

== See also ==

 * [[OtherTools|Other tools]]
Line 17: Line 22:
CategoryWindows CategoryWindows CategoryTools

TortoiseHg

thg_logo_92x50.png

TortoiseHg is a set of graphical tools and a shell extension for Mercurial.

On Windows

TortoiseHg consists of a shell extension, which provides overlay icons and context menus in your file explorer, and a command line program named thg.exe which can launch the TortoiseHg tools. Binary packages of TortoiseHg for Windows include Mercurial, TortoisePlink and a merge tool and are thus completely ready for use “Out of the Box”.

On Linux

TortoiseHg consists of a command line thg script and a Nautilus extension which provides overlays and context menus in your file explorer. You must have Mercurial installed separately in order to run TortoiseHg on Linux. TortoiseHg binary packages list Mercurial as a dependency, so it is usually installed for you automatically.

TortoiseHg is primarily written in Python and PyQt (the Windows shell extension being the notable exception). The thg script and TortoiseHg dialogs can be used on any platform that supports PyQt, including Mac OS X.

Online documentation is available at: https://tortoisehg.readthedocs.io/ (the English version is most up to date, but it's available in more languages).

Download: https://www.mercurial-scm.org/release/tortoisehg/

See also


CategoryWindows CategoryTools

TortoiseHg (last edited 2024-06-12 02:37:50 by FJYLin3495)