Re: Adding existing svn files to new project
Re: Adding existing svn files to new project
- Subject: Re: Adding existing svn files to new project
- From: Brian Zwahr <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 8 Dec 2009 15:01:37 -0600
Ok, the right-clicking on the header was what I was looking for. That gave me the column in Groups and Files I was looking for. Also, after Xcode wasn't responding earlier, I forced it to quit. I just now re-opened it and it seems to be doing ok. Doesn't seem to be slowing down my system or even being slow itself. It started in offline mode (the SCM did) and was working as I would expect. When I went to "online" it shows me files that are out of date, not something I'm used to other clients showing me. I think I understand better now.
Thank you to all of you. It seems to be working and doing what I wanted to do now. This makes me happy. I've got no guarantees of whether I'll be switching to Xcode for my php web app development, but at least now I can give it a fair shot! Perhaps all it needed was a little time and a restart of Xcode after adding so many existing files (even by reference).
On Dec 8, 2009, at 2:12 PM, Quincey Morris wrote:
> On Dec 8, 2009, at 11:30, Brian Zwahr wrote:
>
>> Also, I thought that there is supposed to be a column on the left side of the Groups and Files bar that showed you version control status for files, so that if a file is modified, it has an M to the left of it, etc. I thought I remember seeing screen shots of this. I do not have this column right now. I can see just a list of modified files (sort of, per above) in the SCM part of the Groups and Files bar as well as the SCM Results.
>
> There's one thing you haven't mentioned yet, and it's not clear whether it's so obvious that you didn't feel the need to say it, or whether you didn't actually do it.
>
> If you get info of the project-level (first) item in the Groups & Files list, and click the Configure Roots & SCM button in the General tab, you'll see which repository your project root is connected to. If it's not connected to anything, or connected to the wrong repository, then that may explain the behavior you're seeing.
>
> Also, the SCM status column can be displayed by right-clicking on the Groups & Files List header and choosing "SCM". At least prior to 3.2 (I don't think I've created a brand-new SCM-controlled project yet in 3.2, so not sure what the current behavior is), this column was displayed automatically when you configured the project to use a repository. It wasn't obvious that it was something you could turn on or off manually.
>
> FWIW
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
> Xcode-users mailing list (email@hidden)
> Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
>
> This email sent to email@hidden
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Xcode-users mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to email@hidden