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Portable svn client windows
Portable svn client windows








portable svn client windows portable svn client windows
  1. PORTABLE SVN CLIENT WINDOWS HOW TO
  2. PORTABLE SVN CLIENT WINDOWS PORTABLE

It appears to be more polished than the others, as is often the case with commercial products. Unlike the other tools listed here, SmartGit is a commercial product (from a German company), starting at around $70. Git Extensions is free open source software, and is under active development. From the screen shots, it appears to be feature-rich and complete. This Git GUI has a shell extension (like the Tortoise family) and also a plugin for Visual Studio. TortoiseGit is free open source software, and is under active development. If you like and use TortoiseSVN, you’ll probably find this worth a try. This is an attempt to port TortoiseSVN to git, yielding TortoiseGit. Mike Rowe (a reader) helpfully suggested this msysgit tour, which is very helpful though a bit dated. That was a long time ago for me, but might be Right Now for people reading this post.

PORTABLE SVN CLIENT WINDOWS HOW TO

I could have really used a video walkthrough of how to be productive with it, back when I was starting out. My biggest gripe with msysgit (and its GUI) is that I had to figure out how to use it effectively myself.

PORTABLE SVN CLIENT WINDOWS PORTABLE

There is even a portable (zero-install) version available. It is under active development, and keeps up with the upstream Git versions reasonably well. If you don’t know where to start, or if you want a Linux-like Git experience, start with msysgit and learn to use its tools. I don’t mind the ugly (I get my fix of stylish software over on my Mac…), and I find the features ample for most work. These tools are a bit ugly, but have good and useful functionality. Msysgit includes the same Tk-based GUI tools as Git on Linux: a commit tool and a repo-browse tool, plus a bit of shell integration to active the GUI by right-clicking in Windows Explorer, plus a new thing call git-cheetah, which appears to be heading toward Tortoise-style integration. It is based on MSYS, so it fits in the Windows ecosystem a bit better than the cygwin Git port. Msysgit is the main project which ships a Windows port of Git. There is also a very long list of Git tools on the main Git wiki but that page is just a list, without any other information. I can offer this list of choices, though, along with some thoughts about them. I use msysgit (and its included GUI) most often myself, but I don’t have a clear answer as to which is the “best” Git GUI for Windows. Since then I’ve switched to 75% Mac OSX, but I still use Git on Windows for a few projects, and I get a lot of questions about Git on Windows. I adopted Git as my primary source control tool a couple of years ago, when I was using Windows as my primary (90%) desktop OS.










Portable svn client windows