>From [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Laine Stump)
Subject: Re: My first stumper ...
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From: Laine Stump <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 18 Jan 2001 15:25:48 -0500
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"Derek R. Price" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> If you are worried about scripting things and there are a lot of
> files involved, you could operate on all of them with CVS then sleep
> for a second then operate on them again,
Hmm. That's a good idea, although it would make the perl script much
more complex (and also cause it to use a bunch more memory). I'll have
to mull that over...
> but I expect if you know the file has been altered anyhow, 'cvs ci
> -f' isn't a big deal.
VSS sometimes puts in revisions that don't really change anything in
the code - if I remember correctly, when a file is "branched" (quoted
because their idea of branching is a bit different), it creates a null
revision on the branch. Another alternative would be for me to learn
more about the details of VSS operation so I would know which
revisions could safely be ignored.
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