Well, I felt kind of sorry to see the project move away from SVN.
I've got good results with SVN; I use it for my home projects, at work,
have contact to other SVN-users, etc.
And it has that wonderful TortoiseSVN Windoze-Explorer-Extension.

What I found out, now that the shift to git has happened, is that
there's a Tortoise-* clone for git, too!
I wonder how it will perform from a SVN-user's point of view.

So maybe this could help you: http://code.google.com/p/tortoisegit/

BTW - where can I find the official git repository again?... How to
fetch development from others? or is there a head where all patches go
into like it was with SVN head?


bbackde at googlemail.com wrote:
> I have no problem with commits and updates from the command line.
> But when it comes to compare tasks (what was changed, what did I change
> compared to the HEAD, or to any other revision), then I really prefer Eclipse.
>
> If you like the command line, ok. But if I can't work with git using
> my prefered IDE,
> then I have a problem. I don't want to change anything just because you 
> decided
> to switch to some SCM that is mostly used by command line freaks ^^
>
> So I will fiddle with the Eclipse plugin, and if I fail I have to
> decide how to proceed...
>
> I fear that git could discourage some part-time devs from contributing
> to freenet.
> But I agree that some other devs might love git.
>
> On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 16:09, Ian Clarke <ian at locut.us> wrote:
>   
>> On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 5:38 AM, xor <xor at gmx.li> wrote:
>>     
>>> I consider learning command line usage for stuff for which a GUI can be
>>> used as a waste of my personal lifetime and will not do so, I'd rather
>>> sit in the sun or listen to music or hang out with friends or whatever.
>>>       
>> Well, you are wrong.  If you made the effort to become proficient with
>> the command line you might find you have more time for listening to
>> music or hanging out with friends.  The command line remains the most
>> efficient way to do many things.  For example, I use a mac and I find
>> that stuff like moving files around is much more efficient with the
>> command line than with Finder, the Mac's file manager.
>>
>> Perhaps some day someone will invent a gui with the power, efficiency,
>> and flexibility of the command line, but it hasn't happened yet.
>>
>> Ian.
>>
>> --
>> Ian Clarke
>> CEO, Uprizer Labs
>> Email: ian at uprizer.com
>> Ph: +1 512 422 3588
>> Fax: +1 512 276 6674
>> _______________________________________________
>> Devl mailing list
>> Devl at freenetproject.org
>> http://emu.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/devl
>>
>>     
>
>
>
>   

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