Update: check out this comment for a visual preview and clarifications Thank you for your enthusiasm, input, and patience. We're listening and we'll keep the conversation going! (please keep it positive and encouraging) This isn't set in stone though - post your constructive feedback about our proposed direction in this discussion. As we ramp up work on this we'll be sure to share more information. We've put this feature on the roadmap for later this year after we wrap up the current projects in flight. The quality bar for this experience is high and we're committed to delivering a modern, flexible UX you'll be happy to use every day. It also requires revisiting certain fundamental assumptions in the Sourcetree for Windows architecture, especially around focus and state, and we want to make sure we get that right. addresses at-a-glance access to recent changes across all local reposĪs you might suspect this is a non-trivial amount of work to accomplish.sorting options in "New" tab - by name (current), modified, recently updated.better highlight bookmark naming and automatically resolve the same name as "Repo", "Repo_2", "Repo_3", etc.addresses ability to determine which tab is which.richer tooltips for tabs to show the bookmark name and path.addresses ability to keep repos up to date without opening them in a tab.push/pull options in contextual menu for items in the local repos list.reactive layout for the "New" tab to adjust to all sizes.addresses side by side, always visible needs for particular repositories and all local repos.tear-off tabs - separate out any repo tab into its own window, or the "New" tab with its bookmarks list, similar to Visual Studio (pictured above).In the end we settled on the following set of changes to offer the best balance for all our users: S ome came with renewed performance concerns, others had a lack of information density and/or persistent visibility, and many lacked cohesion with either Windows, Atlassian, or Sourcetree for Mac. Ultimately each of these failed to deliver on our goals in one way or another. create an expanding tab bar similar to the one found in Edge, potentially combined with the "set aside" overlay. add push/pull toast notifications with an improved "New" tab experience.bring back a revised version of the sidebar.Before getting into what we're leaning towards I'll touch on a few of the concepts we discussed and why they didn't survive to the final round. We put all the options on the table and evaluated the pros and cons of each. Starting from these functional requirements we set out to explore what pattern(s) might work best.
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