John Rothfels on May 30, 2016
Wouldn't it be awesome if you could review, browse, and search code on GitHub as though you were in an IDE, with jump-to-definition, doc tooltips, and cross-references? We think so. That’s why we built the Sourcegraph Chrome extension for GitHub.
Update (June 22, 2016): Added support for pull requests and diffs.
[Install Chrome extension for GitHub.] (https://docs.sourcegraph.com/integration/browser_extension) And don’t let your team review any code until they get it, too!For Go, Java, TypeScript, and JavaScript only; more languages coming soon!
The Sourcegraph Chrome extension keeps you in flow while coding, with:
It’s totally free. See what other devs are saying about it:
Learning a new code base using @sourcegraph is extra dope! https://t.co/MKbac0RB0B pic.twitter.com/6YWeYyyYZo
— Kelsey Hightower (@kelseyhightower) October 26, 2016
Used @sourcegraph jump-to-definition across 3 projects, 2 langs, finally landing deep in Golang src. Took < 10 min to pin down the issue. 💪🏼
— Gabe Monroy (@gabrtv) June 3, 2016
"Do you use source graph?" My multi-times a day question for when I talk to people about @github projects. #devBetter @sourcegraph
— chase adams (@chaseadamsio) September 9, 2016
Update (June 22, 2016): Added support for pull requests and diffs.
After installing, view some code on GitHub and hover your mouse over identifiers: