Stuart Cooper [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[...]
but this is a bit tricky, so making copies, doing cvs update -A and
then moving the copies over and then checking in is perfectly
acceptable.
Did I forget something, or CVS should have been left the original in the
file .#hello.c.1.1?
--
Sergei.
My reading comprehension of it must be 100%, because
when I tried the following,
1. edit hello.c, add some experimental stuff
2. do a cvs commit of above, it tells me version is now 1.2 from 1.1
3. I revert back to non-experimental version of hello.c like so,
cvs update -r 1.1 hello.c
4. put
Hi Alex,
My reading comprehension of it must be 100%, because
when I tried the following,
1. edit hello.c, add some experimental stuff
2. do a cvs commit of above, it tells me version is now 1.2 from 1.1
3. I revert back to non-experimental version of hello.c like so,
cvs update -r
ok, calmed down, re-read:
http://cvsbook.red-bean.com/cvsbook.html#Examining%20And%20Reverting%20Changes
and good to go :D
On Mon, May 30, 2005 at 07:00:55PM -0700, Alex Liberman wrote:
My reading comprehension of it must be 100%, because
when I tried the following,
1. edit hello.c, add