Again, when netbeans actually announced it 6 years ago! You must have installed 
the external plugin.

http://wiki.netbeans.org/CVSSupport


> On 10 Mar 2018, at 12:48, emiddio-frontier <emid...@frontier.com> wrote:
> 
> Completely agree (keep CVS) - last job only recently moved from cvs to git.
> Netbeans is not just used to develop new projects and new code.
> It is used with existing code bases and companies with long lived projects.
> My vote again keep SVN, and continue to offer the CSV support that exists.
> My NB8.2 has CVS in it - looking at tools/plugins/installed - show details
> shows Name CVS, Category Base IDE - description:
> Version: 2.25.1.42.1
> Source: Certified Plugins
> Plugin Description
> Introduces project level CVS (Concurrent Versioning System) features. Version 
> control actions, such as diff, update, and commit aid in streamlining typical 
> team development cycles. 
> 
> Where do you get idea CVS is deprecated in Netbeans ?
> 
> -Gary
> 
>> On 3/9/2018 5:31 PM, Jerry Nicholson wrote:
>> "It’s important for all technology that we don’t hold back younger 
>> generations by supporting legacy as it slows evolution of technology." 
>> 
>> I could not disagree more. It is important for youngsters to consider the 
>> amount of commitment to a particular technology that business 
>> has. If a company that employs many people uses a particular technology, 
>> then the transition to newer, possibly better technology must 
>> take that into account. If there is a large amount of software that is built 
>> using some package or another, it is stupid to just dump it because 
>> "younger" people like something else. This is business and business is life 
>> to programmers. You like getting paid? Rethink your transition 
>> theology. We all want new technology, but don't kill the goose that lays the 
>> new technology golden egg. 
>> 
> 

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