What is it you don't understand ?
The thing is simple: I have a directory where I created an eclipse project.
This directory contains other subdirectories, and in one of those I also
created an Eclipse project. I don't know about "references" in Eclipse or
such so in both cases they are normal, full Eclipse projects.
Subclipse apparently does not like the fact that two projects are syncing
via SVN against the same directory. Or anyway, it does not like what I did
(why it crashes I don't know of course, it's up to the Subclipse developpers
to get an idea about why).
I am willing to help fix that problem with useful information if I can.
Jean-Noël
On 3/29/07, Mark Phippard <markphip@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On 3/29/07, Jean-Noël Rivasseau <elvanor@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Hello
> >
> > Thanks for the information. Actually, removing the .syncinfo did not
> > help. But I understood what was causing the problem. Before that I had an
> > Eclipse project in /basedirectory/anotherdirectory/PPH.
> >
> > However; in my company we have lots of files anywhere in /basedirectory
> > (which is actually the base of our Subversion repository), and I wanted to
> > be able to edit them all. So today I created another Eclipse project in
> > /basedirectory.
> >
> > Apparently this screwed up Subclipse since it had two projects
> > containing the same directory (and the same .svn thus), because my new
> > project actually contained my first.
> >
> > I removed from Eclipse the new project I created today and everything
> > went back to normal.
> >
> > Is this a known bug? Is this "acceptable" behavior? In this case how I
> > am suppose to do what I want within Eclipse?
>
>
> I cannot really say I understand the situation well enough to answer.
> Obviously to some degree, I would say it is something we would want to try
> to fix.
>
> --
> Thanks
>
> Mark Phippard
> http://markphip.blogspot.com/
>
Received on Thu Mar 29 18:02:11 2007