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1. | ![]() Mercurial: The Definitive Guide, 1st Edition By: Bryan O'Sullivan Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Publication Date: 24-JUN-2009 Insert Date: 16-JUN-2009 Bookshelf Slots: 1.0 | Overview: Mercurial: The Definitive Guide, 1st Edition
This instructive book takes you step by step through ways to track,
merge, and manage both open source and commercial software projects
with Mercurial, using Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, Solaris, and other
systems. Mercurial is the easiest system to learn when it comes to
distributed revision control. And it's a very flexible tool that's
ideal whether you're a lone programmer working on a small project,
or part of a huge team dealing with thousands of files.
Mercurial permits a countless variety of development and
collaboration methods, and this book offers several concrete
suggestions to...
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2. | ![]() Version Control with Git, 1st Edition By: Jon Loeliger Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Publication Date: 27-MAY-2009 Insert Date: 06-JAN-2009 Bookshelf Slots: 1.0 | Overview: Version Control with Git, 1st Edition
Version Control with Git takes you step-by-step through
ways to track, merge, and manage software projects, using this
highly flexible, open source version control system.
Git permits virtually an infinite variety of methods for
development and collaboration. Created by Linus Torvalds to manage
development of the Linux kernel, it's become the principal tool for
distributed version control. But Git's flexibility also means that
some users don't understand how to use it to their best advantage.
Version Control with Git offers tutorials on the most
effective ways to use it, as well...
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3. | ![]() Version Control with Subversion, 2nd Edition By: C. Michael Pilato; Ben Collins-Sussman; Brian W. Fitzpatrick Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Publication Date: 23-SEP-2008 Insert Date: 13-SEP-2008 Bookshelf Slots: 1.0 | Overview: Version Control with Subversion, 2nd Edition
Written by members of the development team that maintains
Subversion, this is the official guide and reference manual for the
popular open source revision control technology. The new edition
covers Subversion 1.5 with a complete introduction and guided tour
of its capabilities, along with best practice
recommendations.
Version Control with Subversion is useful for people from
a wide variety of backgrounds, from those with no previous version
control experience to experienced system administrators.
Subversion is the perfect tool to track individual changes when
several people...
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4. | Overview: Essential CVS, 2nd Edition
This easy-to-follow reference shows a variety of professionals how
to use the Concurrent Versions System (CVS), the open source tool
that lets you manage versions of anything stored in files. Ideal
for software developers tracking different versions of the same
code, this new edition has been expanded to explain common usages
of CVS for system administrators, project managers, software
architects, user-interface (UI) specialists, graphic designers and
others.
Current for version 1.12, Essential CVS, 2nd Edition
offers an overview of CVS, explains the core concepts, and
describes the commands...
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5. | ![]() By: Laura Wingerd Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Publication Date: 18-NOV-2005 Insert Date: 12-JAN-2006 Bookshelf Slots: 1.0 | Overview: Practical Perforce
When developers build software, they're able to keep track of all
the different versions and all the components they use with
software configuration management (SCM) systems. One of the more
popular SCM products is Perforce.
Authored by Perforce's own VP of product technology,
Practical Perforce is the ideal complement to the existing
product manual, focusing less on the 'how" and more on the "why"
and "when." The book is not only a helpful introduction to
Perforce, it's an enlightening resource for those already familiar
with this versatile SCM product. Whether you're a programmer,
product...
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6. | ![]() Subversion Version Control: Using The Subversion Version Control System in Development Projects By: William Nagel Publisher: Prentice Hall Publication Date: 16-MAY-2005 Insert Date: 28-JUL-2005 Bookshelf Slots: 1.0 | Overview: Subversion Version Control: Using The Subversion Version Control System in Development Projects In any software development project, many developers contribute
changes over a period of time. Using a version control system to
track and manage these changes is vital to the continued success of
the project. This book introduces you to Subversion, a free,
open-source version control system, which is both more powerful and
much less complex than its predecessor CVS.
In this practical, hands-on guide, you will learn how to use
Subversion and how to effectively merge a version control system
within your development process. As a seasoned Subversion user,
William Nagel draws on lessons...
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7. | ![]() Version Control with Subversion By: Ben Collins-Sussman; Brian W. Fitzpatrick; C. Michael Pilato Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Publication Date: 22-JUN-2004 Insert Date: 20-JUL-2004 Bookshelf Slots: 1.0 | Overview: Version Control with Subversion
One of the greatest frustrations in most software projects is
version control: the art of managing changes to information.
Today's increasingly fast pace of software development--as
programmers make small changes to software one day only to undo
them the next--has only heightened the problem; consecutive work on
code or single-programmer software is a rare sight these days.
Without careful attention to version control, concurrent and
collaborative work can create more headaches than it solves. This
is where Subversion comes into play.
Written by members of the Subversion open source...
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8. | Overview: Essential CVS
CVS, the Concurrent Versions System, is the popular source-code
management tool that frees developers from the chaos that too often
ensues when multiple users work on the same file. An open source
technology that is available on most computer platforms, including
Windows® and Mac OS® X, CVS is widely used to manage program code,
web site content, and to track changes made to system configuration
files. Multiple users can check out files from a directory tree,
make changes, and then commit those changes back into the
directory. If two developers modify the same file, CVS enables both
sets of...
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1-8 of 8 Items < Prev | 1 | Next >
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