I am using git version 2.7.0.windows.1 on a windows pc, I used the following command:
$ nano README
which results me:
bash: nan
If you already have nano install in your system, you just need to add the path of the exe
file to PATH.
To do it just for Git bash
, you can open GITINSTALL_DIR\etc\profile
with any text editor and add this line to it:
export PATH="/DriveLetter/PATH/TO/YOUR/NANO:$PATH"
Of course you need to change the path above according to your case.
If you havn't installed it yet, just download and put it under GITINSTALL_DIR\bin
or any folder included in $PATH
When you install the new version of git you can choose the editor nano.
Little modification of the previous solution (@Simopaa) is worked for me on Windows 10 (without Chocolatey):
Move the nano-git-xxx.exe
to (for example) C:\Program Files\Git\bin
.
Modify the .gitconfig
file with the following (single and double quotes are important):
[core]
editor = "winpty '/c/Program Files/Git/bin/nano-git-0d9a7347243.exe'"
(Optional step) Make nano
available for editing in general:
Create or edit the one of the startup script of bash (e.g. ~/.bash_profile
) with the followings:
export PATH="/c/Program Files/Git/bin:$PATH"
alias nano="winpty nano"
If anyone's still struggling with this, here's how I managed to get it working.
C:\Program Files\Git\bin
. I renamed it to nano.exe
.winpty nano
[core]
editor = winpty C:/Program Files/Git/bin/nano.exe
There might be a more elegant solution, but this works for me.