The answer is yes. But you are getting off topic, this is rather subversion releated than continuum.
hth, - martin On 24 Oct 2008, Jan K wrote: > > Thanks wendy.I have another doubt.Should i follow the same structure for ant > project? > > Wendy Smoak-3 wrote: > > > > On Tue, Oct 21, 2008 at 11:21 PM, Jan K <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> > >> I have a folder structure in svn as > >> Training -- This is my root folder > >> pom.xml > >> Inside Training Folder ,i have > >> -- Branch > >> -- Tag > >> -- Trunk > >> Inside Trunk folder,i have > >> Test.Java > > > > It seems strange to have a pom.xml *above* the trunk directory. > > > > The Subversion convention is trunk, branches and tags. > > > > Your pom would normally go inside trunk, leaving branches and tags for > > "copies" of your project at appropriate times. And by default your > > source code goes in src/main/java/[package structure]. > > > > For example, compare your project structure to what you get from > > > > mvn archetype:create -DgroupId=com.example -DartifactId=myproject > > > > (or see > > http://maven.apache.org/guides/introduction/introduction-to-the-standard-directory-layout.html > > which has more information.) > > > > Training/ > > trunk/ > > pom.xml > > src/main/java/com/acme/training/Test.java > > > > (Again, pasting xml into Nabble doesn't seem to work, it strips the > > element names out, so I couldn't read the pom.) > > > > -- > > Wendy > > > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://www.nabble.com/Class-file-not-generated-on-build--tp20090919p20145810.html > Sent from the Continuum - Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. >
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