Meld - a great visual diff and merge tool for linux(meld.sourceforge.net) |
Meld - a great visual diff and merge tool for linux(meld.sourceforge.net) |
I recommend Diffuse for that, and also for three-way merging: http://diffuse.sourceforge.net/
I do join in recommending Meld for your everyday diff/merge, though. :)
Even though it's commercial I gladly payed for it. It's really fast, does a great job on aligning automatically, easily lets me isolate blocks or do manual align, has rules for comparing files, and I could go on.
note: I use Emacs for many other things so that specific point is not a pro or con for me.
http://www.scootersoftware.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?p=24...
It is a newer commercial product with several rough edges, but now there's a "community edition" to try out (it's possible to use just the diff/merge tool without obtaining a license key to setup the server portion):
http://codicesoftware.blogspot.com/2010/11/building-plastic-...
Unfortunately (for automation's sake), there doesn't seem to be any obvious way to specify a single default output file. So you need to manually save whichever file you merged in to, and then refuse at the prompt to save the rest.
Now, if there were an OSX-native app that does 3-panel merges, I'd gladly switch off of Meld.
http://codicesoftware.blogspot.com/2010/07/xmerge-to-merge-r...
Unfortunately, it is not inexpensive.
Glad to see they're working on implementing that feature, though.
edit: Just curious.
KDiff3 is not so good as winmerge as visual diff tool. And kdiff3 UI has small problem on Ubuntu, as it was not developed for gnome environment.
But there's no way to make it the one that's saved by default. You have to select it as the one to save, and then you have to refuse in the dialog that asks whether you want to save the other two.