Kaleidoscope 4.3.1
Now I have several pieces of text in Kaleidoscope, each represented by an entry in the File Shelf. In this case, we can see that “files” in File Shelf can also be temporary clipboard content. Further on in this post, we will also see that they can be the results of Unix pipes or Git revisions of a file.
Most of the time, it’s much quicker to take parts from two different versions that I like. But even then, I tend to change a few bits.
To solve that puzzle, we need a slightly different approach. First, I make sure that the two best versions are selected as A and B. Then I select Merge > New Merge from Comparison from the menu. This opens a new merge document with the two previously selected results as A and B and a merged version in the middle. Now I can copy from A and B to the result as I like, and I can also freely edit the merged result.
It’s not uncommon that files will be moved or renamed over time in a Git repository. Kaleidoscope can now track those changes. It shows the entire history of a file, across name and path changes. The commit details popover informs about any change in files name or location for that commit. The filter at the bottom of the File History allows searching for all past names of a file.
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Kaleidoscope 4.3 looks at the remote of a Git repository. When it detects a common one, such as a GitHub, GitLab or Bitbucket URL, it tries to be smart and automatically offers links to tickets, commits, and branches.
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The beauty with Kaleidoscope 4.3 is that this Markdown content is now being rendered properly, making digging into past work on a file much easier and more fun.
Previously: