On Feb 15, 8:17 pm, Margaux <[email protected]> wrote: > > After creating a file, you should see it appear in the Versions with a > question mark in a blue bubble beside it. Select the file and then > click Add from the top bar. The next time you commit, it should > include that file.
I know how to do it.* I'm just saying that from the point of view of someone used to working within the Finder, it seems very strange and rather inefficient. The way this seems to work, we have to perform three steps to rename a file: rename in Finder, delete old (missing) file from the project within Versions, add renamed (new) file to the project within Versions. What I'd like Versions to do is, when a folder is committed, notice (as it clearly does) that some files are missing and *assume* that this means the user intends to delete them (maybe even pop up a dialog box asking for confirmation), and then pass Subversion the command to delete these files. Similarly, if it notices on commit that there are files present in the folder that aren't in the Subversion database, I'd like it to *assume* that these files should be added to the project as part of the commit. (Obviously this should be an option rather than the only possible behaviour.) Or is this not the way Subversion should be used? If not, what should I be doing instead when I want to add or delete files? Rhiannon *Though I did have to figure it out by trial and error. Is there a manual anywhere that tells me about the user interface of Versions, what the numbers after the projects refer to, what the question mark in the blue bubble means, etc.? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Versions" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/versions?hl=en.
