Do you use git difftool to review changes before making a commit? The problem with that is that you get to see the diff of one file at a time. You can't easily stop it after few files and you can't go back to a previous file. vimtabdiff.py loads all the files with diffs, one in each vim tab page. You can move around any file and edit the diffs easily.
Install
    mkdir -p ~/bin
    # for python version >= 3.10
    curl -o ~/bin/vimtabdiff.py "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/balki/vimtabdiff/master/vimtabdiff.py"
    # for python version < 3.10
    curl -o ~/bin/vimtabdiff.py "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/balki/vimtabdiff/br-py38/vimtabdiff.py"
    chmod +x ~/bin/vimtabdiff.py
You may need to add ~/bin to your PATH variable if not already done. See here for help.
👍 this issue for pip install support
Screenshot
Usage
    usage: vimtabdiff.py [-h] [--vim VIM] pathA pathB
    Show diff of files from two directories in vim tabs
    positional arguments:
      pathA
      pathB
    options:
      -h, --help  show this help message and exit
      --vim VIM   vim command to run
Git difftool
Setup
    git config --global difftool.vimtabdiff.cmd 'vimtabdiff.py $LOCAL $REMOTE'
    git config --global alias.dt 'difftool --tool vimtabdiff --dir-diff'
Usage
    git dt <any git diff revision expression> # see `man gitrevisions`
    git dt           # Unstaged changes
    git dt --staged  # Staged changes
    git dt HEAD~1    # Last commit
    git di v1.0 v2.0 # diff between two tags
Using custom vim command
Using clean vim without reading vimrc
    git config --global difftool.vimtabdiff.cmd 'vimtabdiff.py --vim "vim --clean" $LOCAL $REMOTE'
Git config file (~/.gitconfig) should look like this
    [alias]
            ...
            dt = difftool --tool vimtabdiff --dir-diff
    [difftool "vimtabdiff"]
            cmd = vimtabdiff.py --vim \"vim --clean\" $LOCAL $REMOTE
Using better diff algorithm
    git config --global difftool.vimtabdiff.cmd 'vimtabdiff.py --vim "vim +\"set diffopt+=algorithm:patience\"" $LOCAL $REMOTE'
Note: Not tested in non-linux OS. But I guess it should work fine. Pull requests welcome if found any issues.
Similar
					Languages
				
				
								
								
									Python
								
								100%
							
						
					