FWIW, I started out with Git and even read through the Pro Git book
(which was very good and very helpful):
http://progit.org/
I used it for several months, but I ended up abandoning it because of
what seemed to be second class support on Windows and, secondarily, my
own difficulty in just getting used to it. I tried HG next and have
*never* looked back. The only thing that ever made me miss git was
github, but since Atlassian has taken over bitbucket I am extremely
pleased with the HG/BB combination and I convert everything from SVN at
my first opportunity.
The only thing that irritates me is that I can't use SSH repo URLs on
windows without using TortoiseHG, at least, I haven't taken the time to
get it working with the hg command line version (which is likely a
platform issue, not HG's fault).
Anyway, it seems no one had any strong objections to HG. Mark, does
that mean you will be moving to HG?
--------------------------------------
Randy Syring
Intelicom
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Office: 502-212-9913
For the wages of sin is death, but the
free gift of God is eternal life in
Christ Jesus our Lord (Rom 6:23)
On 02/07/2011 08:29 PM, Mark Hammond wrote:
On 8/02/2011 12:17 PM, Vernon Cole wrote:
My personal stuff is on bzr and I have put my open source stuff on hg,
partly because you said you were switching to it. A 3rd dvcs is one too
many IMHO.
Yeah - back in April 2009 I stated I would move to hg. But given the
time that passed, a few personal experiences and the various
discussions on python-dev about some if the pain it is facing, I was
looking if anyone's experience over the last couple of years could
sway me away from it. Apparently not - which I *think* is good :)
Cheers,
Mark
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