Ben Collins-Sussman wrote: > On Sun, Jan 10, 2010 at 12:50 PM, deostroll <[email protected]> wrote: > > I've tried something like > > > > $ svn checkout '<my_url>/svn/trunk' sample --username <my_username> > > > > and it created a dir called sample. It so happens that this is an > > empty project. I was just trying to upload a text file. I had no clue > > where to upload the file first of all. Anyway went ahead to create the > > text file in the "sample" directory, and did the following: > > > > $ svn commit '<url_to_the_trunk>' > > 'svn commit' only sends changes to the repository when there are > changes to send. You have to tell svn that you want to add the text > file to version-control: 'svn add file.txt'. Then you'll see that > 'svn status' indeed shows something as "scheduled for addition" (it > would likewise tell you if something already under version control has > new edits). Then 'svn commit' will send those new changes to the > repository. > > But really, you need to spend more time on the basics of svn. Read > the quick start, read chapter 2. This is not the proper forum for > "tell me how to use svn"; try [email protected] for that. > And make a bit more effort in reading before asking 1000 list members > to give you a personal tutorial. :-)
Thanx Ben, but I am still wondering why there aint a svn tutorial written with sites like google code project hosting in mind... --deostroll
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