Learning CVS Using KDE's Cervisia
JigSaw writes "Carlos Leonhard Woelz put together a detailed guide on how to use CVS using KDE's Cervicia application. It is an article useful to newbies and well-described to experience users too."
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tla, Subversion, arch, or any of the other CVS "replacements". We are rapidly approaching the point where we better start checking code in somewhere and the only thing I know is CVS.
For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
Mmmmm... cerveza.
Wait--what?
I'll start and say that the article is well written. But if your developers are not able to access kde, this wom't help much. I am running a site with 8 repositories each with mulitple modules and different levels of users on different windows and unix's/linux. The best client I found was smartCVS. The latest beta has great diff, mergs and conflict tool built in. Beats tha pant's off WinCVS and tortoise. It also presents operations so that non-technical users can easily learn the basics.
What are they doing teaching people how to use CVS? Don't they know that Subversion 1.0 finally came out today?
have a program for gynecologists?
Oh wait... Cervi-sia.
Nevermind.
There is a Universal Life Value Check it
I use CVS for my current main project, I keep hearing there are better things but what I really want to know is: if I change will I have to essentially begin with a blank repository featuring the latest version or can I convert the change history from CVS to subversion or similar? Anyone know?
I would have thought that they would name it Kerviza or KommonCvs or something wierd :)
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur