SharePatch
Share git patches with clean, review-ready browser diffs Discussion | Link.

Our Take
Nayan Surya, Akshay Kumar, Shubham Padia, and Yuji Ueki looked at how developers share code changes and said "we can do better." Because let's be honest—raw patch files are ugly. They're text blobs that look like your terminal had a nightmare, and trying to review them in Slack or email is a punishment that should be illegal. SharePatch turns those ugly patch files into clean, syntax-highlighted browser diffs that actually look like code. You know, with the green and red lines, the line numbers, the collapsible sections—the stuff that makes code review bearable.
This is one of those tools that seems simple but you'll realize you needed it the second you see it. No more copying-pasting patch content into GitHub to see what changed. No more squinting at terminal output trying to figure out if that's a function rename or a deletion. Just drop the patch in and get a diff view that your entire team can read without crying. It's built for developers who actually care about code review being usable, which should be all of them but somehow isn't. SharePatch just made patch files not suck—for the first time ever.
Key Facts
The people behind SharePatch
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