I've heard from good sources that git works under Cygwin under Windows. It
seems to be generally accepted that it doesn't work really well in this
environment, in that it's slower, and its initial installation is a pain. But
if you have a good reason to want it, I believe that it could be made
On 11/7/07, Elizabeth Keogh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi again,
>
> Mauro pointed out to me that communication amongst the team isn't as good
> as it could be, especially given how many of us live or work in London.
>
> I'd like to second his suggestion that those of us who are co-located
> sh
On 11/7/07, Elizabeth Keogh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
If you guys are in on this, that makes me happy.
>
Hooray!
- I reserve the right to revert your version if you break the build.
>
What is this "revert" and "version" of which you speak? :)
Code changes will take the form of pa
On 11/7/07, Mauro Talevi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Some issues to ponder on for my part are:
>
> - what is the state of IDE integration - really difficult to go back to
> state of little or no refactoring support.
Git is a non-starter because it doesn't run on windows and only just works
on
Hi again,Mauro pointed out to me that communication amongst the team isn't as good as it could be, especially given how many of us live or work in London.I'd like to second his suggestion that those of us who are co-located should get together occasionally for a pint and a chat (next week, anyone?)
Hi all,If you guys are in on this, that makes me happy.I'd really like this version of JBehave to be driven by its example projects.Before I added Hellbound to the build I lost key features which I guess people didn't think were used or needed, but which I was using to drive Hellbound, or my Game o
Dan North wrote:
On a personal note, I'd like to develop it using mercurial rather than
subversion, having discovered that moving from centralised to
distributed source control is almost as liberating as having source
control in the first place. So in terms of logistics, we would keep
http:/