On Thu, Aug 7, 2008 at 10:02 AM, Colin Guthrie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Robert Cummings wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 2008-08-07 at 09:43 +1000, Ross McKay wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, 6 Aug 2008 16:42:23 -0400, "Benjamin Darwin" wrote:
>>>
>>> [...]
>>>> I'm wondering if anybody knows of a version control software program
>>>> that
>>>> may fit my needs.
>>>>
>>>> Basically, I'm looking for something that runs locally, not on the live
>>>> site, that I can edit the files on the dev computer, and store old
>>>> versions
>>>> on the dev computer, and then just publish off of the local onto the
>>>> live
>>>> site whenever I need to. [...]
>>>>
>>> A couple of very easy-to-use ones are Subversion and CVS. Both are very
>>> easy to use from a shell / command line, and both have nice GUIs
>>> available for both Windows and *nix. Many editors and IDEs will work
>>> with CVS directly, and some with Subversion.
>>>
>>
>> While I currently use CVS, I probably wouldn't choose it going forward
>> since Subversion solves many of the problems it has... as does GIT if I
>> recall. I'm still using CVS because it works for me and I haven't
>> allocated the time yet to switch over.
>>
>
> Yeah I agree here. I wouldn't use CVS on any new project.
>
> For me the choices are simple: Git or SVN. Which one would depend on the
> kind of project (binary data?) and the team size/independent working
> requirements.
>
> Col


Thanks everyone for the opinions. I'm looking into Subversion and GIT, and
hopfully installating one (or both) to test later today.

--Ben

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