I assume that it\'s because of the color setting in my config file, but I\'ve tried changing that to no avail. Maybe I\'m not doing that right?
Notice that Git Bash
I don't think the command prompt will support coloring different parts of the output out of the box. You'd probably need some extension or add-on to handle it. Have you considered using Powershell? In addition to the built-in support for the coloring you're looking for, it's also much more versatile and powerful than the normal command prompt.
git in cmd should work just fine. I would check both your gitconfig local and gitconfig global before giving up here.
the first thing I would do is a
git branch --color
or
git diff --color
you can also use the -c option
git -c color.ui=always status
if you see colors then what is likely happening is your local gitconfig is overriding the setting in your global gitconfig
at that point do a
git config --local --edit
if things say auto or true and you still don't see colors. set the output to always. I recommend this b\c it is possible for git to make mistakes and not treat cmd as a terminal
from git-config:
If this is set to always, git-diff(1), git-log(1), and git-show(1) will use color for all patches. If it is set to true or auto, those commands will only use color when output is to the terminal. Defaults to false.
like so
[color]
branch = always
diff = always
interactive = always
status = always
ui = always
hope this helps!
I'm seeing the exact same problem, only for some command prompts. (By default it works, but when I run my team's "razzle" customization script the output is broken like your screenshot. Oddly, coloring in git log and status works fine; just branch is broken.)
I created a new shortcut that launched the same customization script, and the output is fixed for my new shortcut. Very weird.
If you run git branch --no-color
you see the right output, just without color?
You can run git config --local --add color.branch never
to set that as the default for this repo.