Last I checked (about 6-7months ago) the git plugin for Eclipse was good (http://code.google.com/p/egit/), I think he's being modest when he says it's "very much a work in progress". I've fallen out favour using IDE plugins for SCM, I much prefer command line.

Craig.

On 22-Apr-09, at 10:44 AM, Johan Compagner wrote:

Before i will use git (which i also think is a pretty great product) it has
to has eclipse plugins that are on par with svn/cvs
else it is just a big no go for me

johan


On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 16:57, Craig Tataryn <[email protected]> wrote:

I love git but I think since you need to run msys or cygwin on Windows in order to use it (granted the bloke who wrote jGit did a great job, so that
opens it up to IDEs) it alienates a lot of developers who develop on
Windows. This is why (I think) open source projects tend to side with hg if
they decide to go dscm, which is a shame, I honestly think git is the
superior product.

With projects like Wicket (and a majority of my client's projects) I
typically keep a local git repo of the code, do my branching and stuff locally then just "git svn dcommit" my changes back up to the svn server.

Craig.

--
Craig Tataryn
site: http://www.basementcoders.com/
podcast:http://feeds.feedburner.com/TheBasementCoders
irc: ThaDon on freenode #basementcoders, ##wicket, #papernapkin
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On 22-Apr-09, at 7:24 AM, Martin Funk wrote:

and wicket is mirrored too :-)

just a > git clone git://git.apache.org/wicket.git

and wicket was on my drive.

Very nice, that's sure get git a little higher up on my list.

Did anyone follow the history of that? Are thoes mirrors there to stay, or
may they be just a temporry engagement?

How about mentioning it on wicket.apache.org?

mf




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