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In my case, I often revert a few files when doing changes that does not works as intented... Also, I often look at the history to find when something was changed or changes that might cause a bug.
For professionnal working, I find it hard to works a few hours without comparing changes or reverting something.
By the way, I am using PureCM at works.
Philippe Mori
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I think because I have never really used it I haven't come to rely on it or to work in such a way which needs source control.
I can appreciate it for teams but I rarely work within a team
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You put your code in a CListCtrl, each version in a different row and each branch in a new column, and then you eat enough bacon amounts to have your veins enough saturated not to think much about it... and you are set.
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It is a legacy thing, I had source control before everyone else, they worship at the alter of Microsoft, there is only me left working on the stuff in SVN.
Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.
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TFS is good, but the will of Microsoft to control developers life can kill me (I'm referring to changes between versions, that force you to go and upgrade your TFS every year)...
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is. (V)
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Not a must option but still it's quite common
--
The trouble with people, is that they want to hear only what they want to hear.
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was surprised to not see ClearCase as well... maybe because it's another one of those IBM products that everyone forgets about.
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At my "new" company we are forced to use SVN (coding C# on a VM hosted by a Mac ).
I miss doing ALM in TFS. Mostly gated checkins which made collaboration so much easier than playing the blame game.
My plan is to live forever ... so far so good
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Good luck with that 'Living forever' thing. Forever is a loooonnnng time.
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