Another suggestion that might be the best of both GUI and command line
tools: use the OnMyCommand (http://free.abracode.com/cmworkshop/)
contextual menu plug-in to integrate the svn command line tools into
the Finder. Sort of a Mac OS X version of ToroiseSVN (unfortunately
without the fancy icons that show status).
Also keep an eye out for a new version of scplugin
(http://scplugin.tigris.org/).
My plans are to use the command line tools for now, but OnMyCommand
integration in the near future.
Regards,
Jeff
On Tue, 1 Mar 2005 18:35:45 +0100, Ryan Schmidt
<subversion-2005@ryandesign.com> wrote:
> On 01.03.2005, at 16:14, Jay Paulson wrote:
>
> > I'm new to subversion and just installed my copy of it yesterday! I
> > am setting it up on my development server so I can play with it a bit
> > and get to know it. In my organization we are all running on Mac OSX
> > and I was wondering what client software can connect to the Subversion
> > server that I am setting up? Does anyone have any suggestions for me?
>
> I think all the available solutions were just discussed 6 weeks ago on
> the list:
>
> http://svn.haxx.se/users/archive-2005-01/1044.shtml
>
> So far I've tried iSVN, which made me angry for some reason, and svnX,
> which may be the best of a bad bunch. But I haven't opened either in a
> week, using instead the command-line tools, with which I'm quite
> comfortable. At least they work in a predictable (and documented) way.
>
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Received on Wed Mar 2 12:31:17 2005