That's true, but not all projects are structured in a way that is conducive to this approach, and many people work in repositories for which they do not control structure.
Additionally, I recently realized this feature is already supported by Xcode 4 (currently in developer preview) as well as the numerous other existing SVN clients. The ability to filter down the resources to be committed is not a pie-in-the-sky feature, it's practical and rather straightforward to implement. I fully expect to see it in a future release of Versions. (If not, I'll probably be using Xcode 4 for SVN a lot more.) - Quinn On Jan 25, 2011, at 7:53 PM, pelted wrote: > Another solution to conceder would be to check out your project in > parts. Granted this relies heavily on a code structure that would > allow it, but with the right balance of structure, discipline and > svn:externals functionality you can modularize most well formed code > bases. > > > > On Jan 10, 11:45 am, Quinn Taylor <quinntay...@mac.com> wrote: >> This is a workaround, but definitely annoying. Command-clicking sometimes >> works, but sometimes not. For example, if I want to commit changes to a >> directory's properties, but not changes within the directory itself. I end >> up having to use Terminal and the --depth option. >> >> I requested the addition of checkboxes in the commit dialog as well. >> TortoiseSVN and Eclipse's SVN plugins allow for this type of behavior, and >> Versions should do the same. >> >> - Quinn
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature