km@dfa.com wrote:
> If you never use it, you probably have it turned off. If so, you would not
> experience a performance loss.
>
> -- Keith
>
> Joseph Galbraith <galb@vandyke.com> wrote on 10/18/2006 04:57:38 PM:
>
>
>> I personally never use the recycle bin and would be
>> miffed at a performance loss to support it.
>>
>> Small, regular commits are your friend.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Joseph
>>
There is an inexpensive alternative, which if you are paid to develop
software is worth paying money for, even if it only gets used one or
twice a year.
Executive Software's "Recovery Bin" is significantly better than the MS
recycle bin and I still recommend it even since the introduction of TSVN
into the work flow.
Revert itself is a very useful command gets.However I cannot recall a
single instance in the last two years of using TSVN where required
changes have been inadvertently reverted. I'm not clear on why one would
ever delete (revert) something that was really wanted let alone
regularly enough to actually require that capability as a prime time
feature. Maybe I don't understand the use-case. It just seems that a
change in user's habits would be more appropriate rather than clogging
up TSVN with a "feature" having such limited use.
Peter.
Received on Thu Oct 19 02:21:18 2006