Click on nodes of any timeline graph to see diffs between the two
selected versions.
Add the "--tk" option to "fossil diff" commands
to get a pop-up
window containing a complete side-by-side diff. (NB: The pop-up
window is run as a separate Tcl/Tk process, so you will need to
have Tcl/Tk installed on your machine for this to work. Visit
http://www.activestate.com/activetcl to for a quick download of
Tcl/Tk if you do not already have it on your system.)
The "fossil clean -f" command makes a great
alternative to "make clean".
Use "fossil all changes" to look for any uncommitted
edits in any of your Fossil projects. Use
"fossil all pull" on your laptop
prior to going off network (for example, on a long plane ride)
to make sure you have all the latest content locally. Then run
"fossil all push" when you get back online to upload
your changes.
Sub-menu options on Timelines lets you select either 20 or 200
records. But you can manual edit the "n=" query parameter in the
URL to get any number of records you desire. To see a complete
timeline graph, set n to some ridiculously large value like 10000000.
You can manually add a "c=CHECKIN" query parameter to the timeline
URL to get a snapshot of what was going on about the time of some
checkin. The "CHECKIN" can be
any valid check-in or version name, including
tags, branch names, and dates. For example, to see what was going
on in the Fossil repository on 2008-01-01, visit
http://www.fossil-scm.org/fossil/timeline?c=2008-01-01.
Further to the previous two hints, there are lots of query parameters
that you can add to timeline pages. The available query parameters
are tersely documented here.
You can run "fossil test-diff --tk $file1 $file2"
to get a pop-up window with side-by-side diffs of two files, even if
neither of the two files is part of any Fossil repository. Note that
this command is "test-diff", not "diff".
On web pages showing the content of a file (for example
http://www.fossil-scm.org/fossil/artifact/c7dd1de9f) you can manually
add a query parameter of the form "ln=FROM,TO" to the URL that
will cause the range of lines indicated to be highlighted. This
is useful in pointing out a few lines of code using a hyperlink
in a email or text message. Example:
http://www.fossil-scm.org/fossil/artifact/c7dd1de9f?ln=28,30.
Adding the "ln" query parameter without any argument simply turns
on line numbers. This feature only works right with files with
a mimetype of text/plain, of course.
When editing documentation to be checked in as managed files, you can
preview what the documentation will look like by using the special
"ckout" branch name in the "doc" URL while running "fossil ui".
See the embedded documentation for details.