You could also probably write a vim command that would fuzzy find the current directory pretty easily with fzf. If you aren't using it you're missing out!
Generally, the master branch should always contain a runnable/buildable source. This way, when someone clones your repository, they will retrieve a cutting edge version that will also work, which is nice. If you have some very messy unfinished stuff, work on it within a local repository, and push more or less substantial changes to the remote's dev branches.
If you also want to fix some stable releases in time, you will need tags (more in the official online tutorial).
EDIT: There are also ways to save your work before you temporarily checkout branches, like stashing. You can use that to save changes unworthy for a commit.
> Update: New screencast is available at https://asciinema.org/a/104572
Sorry, that screencast GIF is out of date: it's from back when this plugin used Unite instead of FZF (it definitely needs FZF now, but there's nothing preventing you from having both Denite and FZF installed simultaneously). Good point about it being too fast, I'll record and publish a newer version. Thanks.
Yeah I’m using Keycastr. https://github.com/keycastr/keycastr. I used OBS to overlay the keycastr ‘window’ on iterm window capture. I usually just use asciinema for this stuff but wanted to get the keys in there too.
I am running a user study for this plugin. If you end up using it, could you take 5 minutes to fill out this survey (after a few days usage); I'd be very grateful.
I am running a user study for this plugin. If you end up using it, could you take 5 minutes to fill out this survey (after a few days usage); I'd be very grateful.