TrustRadius Insights for Sourcetree are summaries of user sentiment data from TrustRadius reviews and, when necessary, third party data sources.
Pros
Simple and Intuitive UI: Many users have praised SourceTree for its simple, intuitive, and easy-to-navigate user interface. They found it easy to perform tasks like cloning, pulling, and committing even as new users. The clean and visually appealing design has made the overall experience pleasant.
Easy Visualization of Code Changes: Users appreciate the easy visualization of code changes and commit history in SourceTree. This feature has been helpful in understanding the relationship of their code to other branches and tracking changes efficiently.
Integration with Multiple Repositories: A significant number of users liked that SourceTree integrates all their repositories from various online services in one place. This functionality makes it convenient and straightforward to manage version control for their projects without having to switch between different platforms or tools.
Loading Reviews List....
Sourcetree Reviews
1 Review
Engineering
Search is temporarily unavailable. Filters are still applied.
As an eCommerce websites developer, I handle many projects from multiple clients, and Sourcetree works great for handling the code in our repository and keep it synchronized. It provides valuable features as a GUI, so makings stashes, merges, pull requests, managing Git Flow, among others, becomes fairly easy.
Pros
Git flow
Visually representing the repository branches.
Handling third party applications for file comparing
Cons
There is a strange flickering on displays with G Sync on
A better, native, file comparing tool could be added
Likelihood to Recommend
I can't think of an scenario where I would not use Sourcetree over the command line or where it would be objectively worst. I really like the ability to select just the lines I want for a certain commit so I can write the commit message in more detail. I also have not found a feature that you cannot use on Sourcetree but can on a command line interface. Thus, I cannot remember the last time I used the command line interface to handle repositories instead of just installing Sourcetree.