* Aaron ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Ok lets say cvs is the tool.
> Is it also useful for working on a file together??
Indeed! The C in cvs stands for "concurrent". It keeps track of all
modification made in a file. It even can show what
modifications where made by whom in a give time, for example
Ok lets say cvs is the tool.
Is it also useful for working on a file together??
Should he install cygwin to use cvs.
I first thought about only giving him pdf output and having him write
changes in emails, pretty akward though...
I am most concerned about ease of use and a way to both work seperat
> cvs is available for unixes (linux, cygwin) and also for Windows.
> cvs allows concurrent versions, merging of changes from different
> authors etc. An obvious limitation is that it only works on text
> files -- but .tex and .ly are text files, of course.
If you go this route I highly recommend
Aaron wrote:
My main concern now is versioning and project management.
Has anyone out there had experience with this kind of thing and could
they recommend an application, methodology or structure for this
project??
cvs is available for unixes (linux, cygwin) and also for Windows.
cvs allows con
Hi all,
I just am bouncing back from a major computer crash. This distroyed a
large amount of my work...
Anyways I am now forced to install 2.0 and will see shortly what that
does to my life..
My question is this.
I need a way to collaborate on a book I am writing. It contains text, in
both hebr