If you're like me and you use semver for versioning your tags, you probably hate when you do this:
$ git tag -l
0.1.0
0.10.0
0.2.0
0.3.0
0.3.1
0.4.0
0.5.0
0.6.0
0.7.0
0.7.1
0.7.2
0.8.0
0.8.1
0.8.2
0.8.3
0.8.4
0.8.5
0.8.6
0.9.0
because the 0.10.0
tag is hiding way up near the top and you might not even see it.
Here's the solution, create a file on your $PATH
(maybe in your ~/bin
dir) called git-tag-sort
with the contents of the file below, and you should be able to do this:
$ git tag-sort
0.1.0
0.2.0
0.3.0
0.3.1
0.4.0
0.5.0
0.6.0
0.7.0
0.7.1
0.7.2
0.8.0
0.8.1
0.8.2
0.8.3
0.8.4
0.8.5
0.8.6
0.9.0
0.10.0
Have fun!
This won't work in Git for Windows. Do this instead:
git tag | sort -t "." -k1,1n -k2,2n -k3,3n
. This will set the dot as a column separator, then do a numeric sort on the first column, then the second column, then the third column.