RE: [Fwd: CVS, Cygwin, IDE and Emacs]

2002-06-12 Thread Peter Ring
' where people need it (it works as a shell extension to Explorer), and comes with a ssh client integrated. But text files (the administrative files, actually) must be DOS style for TortoiseCVS to work. Kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL

RE: Line Breaks

2002-05-31 Thread Peter Ring
ears now. Those few text files that absolutely must be DOS-style are anyway of little use in a sandbox on a Unix workstation. So all my text files are Unix-style, and a few of them have a CR at the end of each line. kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

RE: merge mode for XML

2002-05-14 Thread Peter Ring
B to determine their longest common subsequence (LCS) or the edit distance between them has been much studied. GNU diff is based on an algorithm published by Eugene W. Myers in 1986. To tell the difference (distance) between two semantic structures is difficult in a very fundamental way. Kind regard

RE: How to keep unix eoln in repository

2002-05-14 Thread Peter Ring
y need DOS text file format, they should be using a cvs client that does eol conversion. kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of juhas Sent: 14. maj 2002 12:56 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: How to keep unix eoln in repositor

RE: merge mode for XML

2002-05-01 Thread Peter Ring
e data types or other restrictions (such as field length), is any DTD'ed document "not XML"? DTDs and schemas are good and should be used wherever possible. But there are realities of life. <>< gary -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]O

RE: merge mode for XML

2002-04-30 Thread Peter Ring
kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: Greg A. Woods [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: 30. april 2002 19:09 To: Peter Ring Cc: CVS-II Discussion Mailing List Subject: RE: merge mode for XML [ On Monday, April 29, 2002 at 08:31:24 (+0200), Peter Ring wrote: ] > Subject: RE:

RE: merge mode for XML

2002-04-28 Thread Peter Ring
e one one XML file to become the other one. There are, to the best of my knowledge, no freely available stand-alone SGML diff tools. Some editors, e.g. ArborText Epic, can do a very nice compare. kind regards, Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED

RE: text files with Unix LF

2002-04-21 Thread Peter Ring
ot aware of any CVS client that handles this gracefully. Kind regards, Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Iqbal Shaikh Sent: 19. april 2002 13:39 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: text files with Unix LF Hi all, We have got our Cvs

RE: ANN: cvssh - secure ext-to-pserver bridge

2002-02-22 Thread Peter Ring
mind that we do have servers running a filesystem with ACLs ... It's just that we don't like them exposed outside the firewall. Kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Douglas Finkle Sent: 22. februar 2002 04

RE: Line ending confusion

2002-02-19 Thread Peter Ring
Or you can check out on the Windows box using a CVS client that doesn't do EOL translation. Both WinCVS and the Cygwin port of cvs can do it. BEWARE: this will also create CVS control files with LF as EOL. Kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[

RE: Checkout text files with the Unix LF (Oxa) - from command line

2001-10-09 Thread Peter Ring
to second-guess me when I know better. At the very least, keyword expansion and record format translation could have been different options. Kind regards, Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Larry Jones Sent: 9. oktober 2001 17:05 To: Pet

RE: line ending conversions

2001-10-09 Thread Peter Ring
d I'm happy as can be. Files that absolutely must have CR/LF tend to be specific for Windows applications anyway, i.e., they are of no use to applications on any other OS. Kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Matt Mc

RE: Checkout text files with the Unix LF (Oxa) - from command line

2001-10-09 Thread Peter Ring
use than MacOS and because the CR/LF format introduces an extra and superfluous distinction between 'binary' and 'text'. Kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Thornley, David Sent: 8. oktobe

RE: Checkout text files with the Unix LF (Oxa) - from command line

2001-10-07 Thread Peter Ring
in any text file should be inherently determined by the operating system. Would you also like your OS to determine what character set you should be allowed to use? Kind regards, Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Mike Castle Sent:

RE: The future of CVS & Subversion

2001-09-21 Thread Peter Ring
done it. Time will show. But CVS won't go away, and I'd never bet the farm on anything that new. Why not start with CVS (or whatever now), and consider SV a year from now? Kind regards, Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf

RE: keyword substitution generates ^M

2001-09-15 Thread Peter Ring
of files that cvs is meant for, right?), you sure want it to display correctly in your editor. Can't be done without information about the encoding. Kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Larry Jones Sent: 14. septemb

cvswrappers, .cvswrappers and client/server

2001-09-13 Thread Peter Ring
*.[Zz][Ii][Pp] -k 'b' Is the wrappers code designed to work in an 'additive' fashion so that the entries with options could be in either the $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/cvswrappers or the ~/.cvswrappers (or a local .cswrappers)? What takes precedence in case the options are different? Kind

RE: Is CVS free for commercial development?

2001-06-26 Thread Peter Ring
/cs/weblog/view/wlg/293 http://www.e-businessworld.com/english/crd_microsoft_528040.html In any case, the requirement in the EULA about not using 'viral' software will be quite difficult to enforce in practice. I think it is a rather defensive move. Kind regards Peter Ring -Original

RE: Is CVS free for commercial development?

2001-06-24 Thread Peter Ring
In any case, corporate users are also welcome to contribute patches, scripts, user guides, constructive criticism etc. Kind regards Peter Ring PS: I wonder whether a cvs client could be developed in a fashion that would make it not subject to the terms of GPL? This might be useful for

RE: problem with LF <--> CRLF trasnlation

2001-05-17 Thread Peter Ring
While there might be some good reasons for native ports, the idea of native 'text' formats seems completely bogus to me. At least, it should always be an option, preferably per file (as is keyword expansion and merge behaviour). Kind regards, Peter Ring -Original Message- Fr

RE: problem with LF <--> CRLF trasnlation

2001-05-16 Thread Peter Ring
the least amount of problems. You can tell WinCVS to use LF in the administrative files, and it will coexist happily with the Cygwin port of cvs; the 'native' port, however, needs CR/LF in the administrative files. Kind regards, Peter Ring __

RE: cvswrappers - any better suggestions ?

2001-04-01 Thread Peter Ring
a copy of the 'cvswrappers' file named '.cvswrappers' into each users home directory. Kind regards Peter Ring -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Greg A. Woods Sent: Saturday, 31 March, 2001 2:19 AM To: Gianni Mariani Cc:

RE: Activity-based CVS shell

2000-05-24 Thread Peter Ring
It's a very nice idea. Essentially you are continuing what CVS started as (a bunch of scripts wrapping RCS up to be more useful). Kind regards, Peter Ring Forlaget MAGNUS A Wolters Kluwer Company -Original Message- From: Cees de Groot [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, M

RE: choice of extension languages for a heterogeneous client/server version control system

2000-03-19 Thread Peter Ring
I might be tempted to opt for Java. While Java is by itself a bit too low-level, you might also consider the fact that a Java run time engine is pervasively available, and that a lot of nice client/server code is being developed for Java. Kind regards Peter Ring