I've kinda come from the opposite end of the spectrum. I've used CVS for quite a while, and when we moved to Apache I had to learn SVN. I've gotten the hang of SVN, and have used GIT at work for some projects; but, I'm still waiting for CoLinux for my 64-bit machine before installing on my laptop at home. Only bad thing is I'm using Windows for all my development. Even with the project at work, I've experienced some weirdness with GIT loosing track of the project. I usually have to remove everything and re-checkout when this happens. SVN hasn't been too bad yet.
James On 12/29/2011 12:38 PM, Aliaksandr Autayeu wrote: > Why are you not happy? :) > > I'm on Windows, and I use git for all my VCS needs for some time. There are > three ways for Git on Windows: Cygwin, msysgit and virtualization :) Each > has its own set of quirks. I use all of them for different purposes, I even > use both GUIs (Tortoise and gitGUI). I started with Cygwin, lately for most > day-to-day tasks I use msysgit. On release, just in case, I check that > master repo is fine using Ubuntu in virtual machine (for example, to ensure > proper file permissions, especially executable bit for scripts). > > Aliaksandr > > On Thu, Dec 29, 2011 at 6:23 PM, James Kosin <[email protected]> wrote: > >> I guess I'll have to start looking for a good GIT port for Windows. :-( >> >> James >> On 12/29/2011 11:10 AM, Aliaksandr Autayeu wrote: >>> I was using Git for submitting patches anyway :) May be now there is a >>> chance to skip doing it altogether :) >>> >>> Aliaksandr >>> >>> On Thu, Dec 29, 2011 at 4:38 PM, Jason Baldridge >>> <[email protected]>wrote: >>> >>>> Apache Cassandra is moving to git for committers: >>>> >>>> http://wiki.apache.org/cassandra/GitTransition >>>> >>>> Can we do this? >>>> >>>> Jason >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Jason Baldridge >>>> Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics >>>> The University of Texas at Austin >>>> http://www.jasonbaldridge.com >>>> http://twitter.com/jasonbaldridge >>>> >>
