>From http://stackoverflow.com/q/7912169/357313...
Current versions of TortoiseSVN do not install command-line SVN client by default. You'll have to: - select it explicitly in the installer (with TSVN 1.7), or - download it and install it separately from http://subversion.apache.org/packages.html. Groente, Michel. > -----Original Message----- > From: help-emacs-windows-bounces+michel=smr...@gnu.org [mailto:help- > emacs-windows-bounces+michel=smr...@gnu.org] On Behalf Of Ken > Goldman > Sent: Thursday, March 31, 2016 11:02 PM > To: help-emacs-windows@gnu.org > Subject: Re: [h-e-w] integrated svn > > On 3/31/2016 4:05 PM, Eli Zaretskii wrote: > >> > >> I'm using Tortoise svn, which is what everyone I know uses on Windows. > >> > >> Is there a way to integrate it with emacs? > > > > Sorry, I don't understand the question. Do you have svn.exe in your > > Tortoise svn installation? I'm guessing you do, so just make sure the > > directory where you have svn.exe is on PATH, that's all. No further > > integration is needed. I don't think it matters much which port of > > svn you installed. > > AFAIK, there is no svn.exe, and I don't see any equivalent to the Linux > command line 'svn' program. Tortoise offers very nice GUI based tools, > and they integrate seamlessly with Windows Explorer. > > So, I'm wondering if anyone has integrated Tortoise svn with emacs? > > If no, is there an alternative solution that will coexist with Tortoise? >