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Developer & Design
Guide to git tags: lightweight, annotated, signing, and pushing tags to remote.
Open Git TagsDeveloper & Design
Reference for the Gitflow branching model with develop, release, and hotfix branches.
Open GitflowYour specific task is guide to git tags: lightweight, annotated, signing, and pushing tags to remote. Open the page, drop your input, get the result — typically under a second.
Your goal is reference for the gitflow branching model with develop, release, and hotfix branches. Same approach: paste in, get the result, move on. No account, no upload.
Both tools live in the same category, so the choice depends on the exact subtask. Git Tags focuses on guide to git tags: lightweight, annotated, signing, and pushing tags to remote; Gitflow focuses on reference for the gitflow branching model with develop, release, and hotfix branches. Try whichever description matches your goal more closely — they're both free.
Yes — both tools are free for unlimited personal use. The Pro plan unlocks higher limits and batch features but the core functionality stays free forever.
Absolutely. Many users chain multiple tools together — process a file with one, then feed the result into another. Nothing is uploaded, so chaining is essentially instant.
No. Both Git Tags and Gitflow work without signup. We only ask for an email if you decide to subscribe to a paid plan.