Surely your whole project is inside one folder. And surely if you're working on a team, you're using git or svn.

Open the project folder. Bam. You're done. You've opened your project. If your project contains a bunch of directories lying around your system then, my friend, you are doing it wrong. (And if you have some perverse reason to do that, there are symlinks.)

And obviously you want to add .tm_properties to your .gitignore. Jeez.

-- 
Morgan Harris
Sent with Sparrow

On Thursday, 15 December 2011 at 9:47 AM, dvlogic wrote:


I rely on project files for TextMate for the following reasons:

(1) I work on many different projects, bouncing between the sets of sources
within each project. By opening a project file, it makes it easy for me to
restore where I was at when I bounce from one project back to another.

(2) I work in a team, where each developer uses different tools on different
platforms. I prefer to keep my TextMate project files in a completely
separate area away from the sources so I don't have to worry about polluting
the source repository with "my baggage."

(3) Because each set of sources contains multi platform files, I use the
TextMate project settings to hide sources (via regex syntax) for files I
don't want to see or more importantly find references in when I do a "find
in project" search.

Please keep projects in TM2 or an equivalent way to group sets of sources.

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