If you're new to subversion or don't want to deal with the command-line you might check out the GUI apps Versions or Conerstone.
http://versionsapp.com http://www.zennaware.com/cornerstone/
On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 12:53 PM, Rob McBroom textmate@skurfer.com wrote:
On 2009-Mar-24, at 9:45 AM, Lucy Buykx wrote:
I then open up my project in TextMate and want to commit my code to the repository. It tells me that my code is not a working copy, so I say ok, lets checkout. Then it asks me for svn+ssh:// something so I type in the file path of the repository and a big error message thus...
If your repository is on your local system, you can use file: instead of svn+ssh:.
So in your case, you probably want to checkout file:///Users/lucy/Sites/wed2/Repository . I've never tried to checkout into an existing directory that already has files in it, etc. I'm not sure exactly what you've done so far or what you're wanting to accomplish, but I generally do something like this when moving an existing project into Subversion.
1. Create the repository with `svnadmin`. 2. Use `svn import` to commit the existing project directory to the repository. 3. Delete, rename, or move the project directory. 4. Use `svn checkout` to "recreate" the project directory as a working copy. 5. Open the new directory as a TextMate project.
-- Rob McBroom http://www.skurfer.com/
Because it screws up the order in which people normally read text.
Original message:
Why is it bad to top-post your reply?
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