git.md


description: Zed is a text editor that supports lots of Git features title: Zed Editor Git integration documentation

Git

Zed has built-in Git support that lets you manage version control without leaving the editor. The Git Panel shows your working tree state, staging area, and branch information. Changes you make on the command line are reflected immediately in Zed.

For operations that Zed doesn't support natively, you can use the integrated terminal.

Git Panel

The Git Panel gives you a birds-eye view of the state of your working tree and of Git's staging area.

You can open the Git Panel using {#action git_panel::ToggleFocus}, or by clicking the Git icon in the status bar.

In the panel you can see the state of your project at a glance: which repository and branch are active, what files have changed and the current staging state of each file.

Zed monitors your repository so that changes you make on the command line are instantly reflected.

Configuration

Open the Settings Editor (Cmd+, on macOS, Ctrl+, on Linux/Windows) to customize Git behavior. Settings are spread across two pages:

  • Panels > Git Panel: Panel position, tree vs flat view, status display style
  • Version Control: Gutter indicators, inline blame, hunk styles

Moving the Git Panel

By default, the Git Panel docks on the left. Go to Panels > Git Panel and change Git Panel Dock to move it to the right or bottom.

Switching to Tree View

The Git Panel shows a flat list of changed files by default. To see files organized by folder hierarchy instead, toggle Tree View in the panel's context menu, or enable it in Panels > Git Panel.

Inline Blame

Zed shows Git blame information on the current line. To turn this off or add a delay before it appears, go to Version Control > Inline Git Blame.

Hiding the Gutter Indicators

The colored bars in the gutter that show added, modified, and deleted lines can be hidden. Go to Version Control > Git Gutter and set Visibility to "Hide".

Commit Message Line Length

Zed wraps commit messages at 72 characters (a Git convention). To change this, search for "Git Commit" in Settings and adjust Preferred Line Length.

Project Diff

You can see all of the changes captured by Git in Zed by opening the Project Diff ({#kb git::Diff}), accessible via the {#action git::Diff} action in the Command Palette or the Git Panel.

All of the changes displayed in the Project Diff behave exactly the same as any other multibuffer: they are all editable excerpts of files.

You can stage or unstage each hunk as well as a whole file by hitting the buttons on the tab bar or their corresponding keybindings.

Word Diff Highlighting

By default, Zed highlights changed words within modified lines to make it easier to spot exactly what changed. To disable this globally, open the Settings Editor and go to Languages & Tools > Miscellaneous, then turn off Word Diff Enabled.

To disable word diff for specific languages only, add this to your settings.json:

{
  "languages": {
    "Markdown": {
      "word_diff_enabled": false
    }
  }
}

File History

File History shows the commit history for an individual file. Each entry displays the commit's author, timestamp, and message. Selecting a commit opens a diff view filtered to show only the changes made to that file in that commit.

To open File History:

  • Right-click on a file in the Project Panel and select "Open File History"
  • Right-click on a file in the Git Panel and select "Open File History"
  • Right-click on an editor tab and select "Open File History"
  • Use the Command Palette and search for "file history"

Fetch, Push, and Pull

Fetch, push, or pull from your Git repository in Zed via the buttons available on the Git Panel or via the Command Palette by looking at the respective actions: {#action git::Fetch}, {#action git::Push}, and {#action git::Pull}.

Push Configuration

Zed respects Git's push configuration. When pushing, Zed checks the following in order:

  1. pushRemote configured for the current branch
  2. remote.pushDefault in your Git config
  3. The branch's tracking remote

This matches Git's standard behavior, so if you've configured pushRemote or pushDefault in your .gitconfig or via git config, Zed will use those settings.

Remotes

When your repository has multiple remotes, Zed shows a remote selector in the Git Panel. Click the remote button next to push/pull to choose which remote to use for that operation.

Staging Workflow

Zed has two primary staging workflows, using either the Project Diff or the panel directly.

Using the Project Diff

In the Project Diff view, you can focus on each hunk and stage them individually by clicking on the tab bar buttons or via the keybindings {#action git::StageAndNext} ({#kb git::StageAndNext}).

Similarly, stage all hunks at the same time with the {#action git::StageAll} ({#kb git::StageAll}) keybinding and then immediately commit with {#action git::Commit} ({#kb git::Commit}).

Using the Git Panel

From the panel, you can simply type a commit message and hit the commit button, or {#action git::Commit}. This will automatically stage all tracked files (indicated by a [·] in the entry's checkbox) and commit them.

Entries can be staged using each individual entry's checkbox. All changes can be staged using the button at the top of the panel, or {#action git::StageAll}.

Committing

Zed offers two commit textareas:

  1. The first one is available right at the bottom of the Git Panel. Hitting {#kb git::Commit} immediately commits all of your staged changes.
  2. The second is available via the action {#action git::ExpandCommitEditor} or via hitting the {#kb git::ExpandCommitEditor} while focused in the Git Panel commit textarea.

Undoing a Commit

As soon as you commit in Zed, in the Git Panel, you'll see a bar right under the commit textarea, which will show the recently submitted commit. In there, you can use the "Uncommit" button, which performs the git reset HEADˆ--soft command.

Configuring Commit Line Length

By default, Zed sets the commit line length to 72 but it can be configured in your local settings.json file.

Find more information about setting the preferred-line-length in the Configuration section.

Branch Management

Creating and Switching Branches

Create a new branch using {#action git::Branch} or switch to an existing branch using {#action git::Switch} or {#action git::CheckoutBranch}.

Deleting Branches

To delete a branch, open the branch switcher with {#action git::Switch}, find the branch you want to delete, and use the delete option. Zed will confirm before deleting to prevent accidental data loss.

Note: You cannot delete the branch you currently have checked out. Switch to a different branch first.

Merge Conflicts

When you encounter merge conflicts after a merge, rebase, or pull, Zed highlights the conflicting regions in your files and displays resolution buttons above each conflict.

Viewing Conflicts

Conflicting files appear in the Git Panel with a warning icon. You can also see conflicts in the Project Diff view, where each conflict region is highlighted:

  • Changes from your current branch are highlighted in green
  • Changes from the incoming branch are highlighted in blue

Resolving Conflicts

Each conflict shows three buttons:

  • Use [branch-name]: Keep the changes from one branch (shows the actual branch name, like "main")
  • Use [other-branch]: Keep the changes from the other branch (like "feature-branch")
  • Use Both: Keep both sets of changes, with your branch's changes first

Click a button to resolve that conflict. The conflict markers are removed and replaced with your chosen content. After resolving all conflicts in a file, stage it and commit to complete the merge.

Tip: For complex conflicts that need manual editing, you can edit the file directly. Remove the conflict markers (<<<<<<<, =======, >>>>>>>) and keep the content you want.

Stashing

Git stash allows you to temporarily save your uncommitted changes and revert your working directory to a clean state. This is particularly useful when you need to quickly switch branches or pull updates without committing incomplete work.

Creating Stashes

To stash all your current changes, use the {#action git::StashAll} action. This will save both staged and unstaged changes to a new stash entry and clean your working directory.

Managing Stashes

Zed provides a stash picker accessible via {#action git::ViewStash} or from the Git Panel's overflow menu. From the stash picker, you can:

  • View stash list: Browse all your saved stashes with their descriptions and timestamps
  • Open diffs: See exactly what changes are stored in each stash
  • Apply stashes: Apply stash changes to your working directory while keeping the stash entry
  • Pop stashes: Apply stash changes and remove the stash entry from the list
  • Drop stashes: Delete unwanted stash entries without applying them

Quick Stash Operations

For faster workflows, Zed provides direct actions to work with the most recent stash:

  • Apply latest stash: Use {#action git::StashApply} to apply the most recent stash without removing it
  • Pop latest stash: Use {#action git::StashPop} to apply and remove the most recent stash

Stash Diff View

To view a stash's contents, select it in the stash picker and press {#kb stash_picker::ShowStashItem}. From the diff view, you can use these keybindings:

Action Keybinding
Apply stash {#kb git::ApplyCurrentStash}
Pop stash (apply and remove) {#kb git::PopCurrentStash}
Drop stash (remove without applying) {#kb git::DropCurrentStash}

AI Support in Git

Zed currently supports LLM-powered commit message generation. You can ask AI to generate a commit message by focusing on the message editor within the Git Panel and either clicking on the pencil icon in the bottom left, or reaching for the {#action git::GenerateCommitMessage} ({#kb git::GenerateCommitMessage}) keybinding.

Note that you need to have an LLM provider configured either via your own API keys or through Zed's hosted AI models. Visit the AI configuration page to learn how to do so.

You can specify your preferred model to use by providing a commit_message_model agent setting. See Feature-specific models for more information.

{
  "agent": {
    "commit_message_model": {
      "provider": "anthropic",
      "model": "claude-3-5-haiku"
    }
  }
}

To customize the format of generated commit messages, run {#action agent::OpenRulesLibrary} and select the "Commit message" rule on the left side. From there, you can modify the prompt to match your desired format.

Any specific instructions for commit messages added to Rules files are also picked up by the model tasked with writing your commit message.

Git Integrations

Zed integrates with popular Git hosting services to ensure that Git commit hashes and references to Issues, Pull Requests, and Merge Requests become clickable links.

Zed currently supports links to the hosted versions of GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket, SourceHut and Codeberg.

Self-Hosted Instances

For self-hosted GitHub, GitLab, or Bitbucket instances, add them to the git_hosting_providers setting so commit hashes and permalinks resolve to your domain:

{
  "git_hosting_providers": [
    {
      "provider": "gitlab",
      "name": "Corp GitLab",
      "base_url": "https://git.example.corp"
    }
  ]
}

Supported provider values are github, gitlab, bitbucket, gitea, forgejo, and sourcehut. The name field is optional and used for display purposes.

Zed also has a Copy Permalink feature to create a permanent link to a code snippet on your Git hosting service. These links are useful for sharing a specific line or range of lines in a file at a specific commit. Trigger this action via the Command Palette (search for permalink), by creating a custom key bindings to the editor::CopyPermalinkToLine or editor::OpenPermalinkToLine actions or by simply right clicking and selecting Copy Permalink with line(s) selected in your editor.

Diff Hunk Keyboard Shortcuts

When viewing files with changes, Zed displays diff hunks that can be expanded or collapsed for detailed review:

  • Expand all diff hunks: {#action editor::ExpandAllDiffHunks} ({#kb editor::ExpandAllDiffHunks})
  • Collapse all diff hunks: Press Escape (bound to {#action editor::Cancel})
  • Toggle selected diff hunks: {#action editor::ToggleSelectedDiffHunks} ({#kb editor::ToggleSelectedDiffHunks})
  • Navigate between hunks: {#action editor::GoToHunk} and {#action editor::GoToPreviousHunk}

Tip: The Escape key is the quickest way to collapse all expanded diff hunks and return to an overview of your changes.

Action Reference

Action Keybinding
{#action git::Add} {#kb git::Add}
{#action git::StageAll} {#kb git::StageAll}
{#action git::UnstageAll} {#kb git::UnstageAll}
{#action git::ToggleStaged} {#kb git::ToggleStaged}
{#action git::StageAndNext} {#kb git::StageAndNext}
{#action git::UnstageAndNext} {#kb git::UnstageAndNext}
{#action git::Commit} {#kb git::Commit}
{#action git::ExpandCommitEditor} {#kb git::ExpandCommitEditor}
{#action git::Push} {#kb git::Push}
{#action git::ForcePush} {#kb git::ForcePush}
{#action git::Pull} {#kb git::Pull}
{#action git::PullRebase} {#kb git::PullRebase}
{#action git::Fetch} {#kb git::Fetch}
{#action git::Diff} {#kb git::Diff}
{#action git::Restore} {#kb git::Restore}
{#action git::RestoreFile} {#kb git::RestoreFile}
{#action git::Branch} {#kb git::Branch}
{#action git::Switch} {#kb git::Switch}
{#action git::CheckoutBranch} {#kb git::CheckoutBranch}
{#action git::Blame} {#kb git::Blame}
{#action git::StashAll} {#kb git::StashAll}
{#action git::StashPop} {#kb git::StashPop}
{#action git::StashApply} {#kb git::StashApply}
{#action git::ViewStash} {#kb git::ViewStash}
{#action editor::ToggleGitBlameInline} {#kb editor::ToggleGitBlameInline}
{#action editor::ExpandAllDiffHunks} {#kb editor::ExpandAllDiffHunks}
{#action editor::ToggleSelectedDiffHunks} {#kb editor::ToggleSelectedDiffHunks}

Not all actions have default keybindings, but can be bound by customizing your keymap.

Git CLI Configuration

If you would like to also use Zed for your git commit message editor when committing from the command line you can use zed --wait:

git config --global core.editor "zed --wait"

Or add the following to your shell environment (in ~/.zshrc, ~/.bashrc, etc):

export GIT_EDITOR="zed --wait"