On 03/03/2011 03:02 PM, Chris McSweeny wrote: > On Thu, Mar 3, 2011 at 4:26 PM, Mark Rages wrote: >> I highly recommend Trac to all you subversion users. It lets you look >> at the repository through a web browser, with nice colored diffs and >> syntax-highlighted source browsing. It's easier than learning all >> the rarely-used options to the command-line tools. > Interesting - not come across that. However I doubt I'll switch, as > an alternative for Windows users is TortoiseSVN - integrates into > Windows explorer, and is what I use. You never have to know any > subversion command line stuff to use it, and the only thing vaguely > difficult is creating your initial repository - after that it's all > point and click. > > I'm assuming those who think using version control sw is difficult > have never tried something as straightforward as TortoiseSVN, or > presumably Trac. Far, far easier than archiving using zip - I used to > do that, but it doesn't provide you with all the advantages proper vc > sw does. > > I mean a lot of my home projects consist of a single small .asm file, > but they still go under version control so that I can track changes > and revert if necessary - once you've got TortoiseSVN setup it's just > so trivial to add a new project. > > Chris > Trac is a very nice tool, especially for groups. Even for a single user,=20 it is a nice system if you want to manage source and keep a wiki of=20 documentation, etc. IIRC, there is a git plugin for trac as well. -Pete --=20 http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist .