On 04/03/2011 13:52, Isaac Marino Bavaresco wrote: > He could use the original command-line Subversion tools. TortoiseSVN is > just a productivity enhancement tool for GUI, don't need to be installed > at all. > Subversion is command-line zealot compliant. or I can continue with Rapid SVN In Netbeans doing Java I use the built in IDE tools to connect to=20 repositories of various kinds, local on our own server and on the Internets I can't say I liked SourceSafe on VS 6.0 I've recently switched from VB 6.0 to C# on .net 4.0 for "odds and ends"=20 of windows programming, so I may look at version control etc on that. I=20 did 1st use C# in 2003, but didn't stick at it. More like MS J++ than=20 C++ which I've used since 1987 or 1988 perhaps. Before I did C in 1988=20 or 1989 --=20 http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist .