On Fri, Mar 16, 2018 at 10:10:35AM -0700, Eric Johnson wrote:
> Hi Victor,
>
> It sounds like you might be using TortoiseSVN. Most likely you'll get a
> better answer asking people familiar with that project. This email list is
> specifically for the core SVN functionality, not the GUI clients.
>
> Eric.
Indeed, the TortoiseSVN has a separate mailing list:
https://tortoisesvn.net/community.html
I would still like to add that there should be no need to try to commit
a file in order to figure out if the file has uncommitted changes.
In the absence of overlay icons (which I cannot explain, I'm afraid),
the 'Check for modifications' dialog may be used instead. This dialog
can be chosen from the menu after right-clicking anywhere in a directory
window: https://tortoisesvn.net/docs/release/TortoiseSVN_en/tsvn-dug-wcstatus.html#tsvn-dug-wcstatus-2
> On Fri, Mar 16, 2018 at 9:53 AM, Victor A. Wagner Jr. <vawjr_at_rudbek.com>
> wrote:
>
> > I've been using CVS and then when Subversion was doing well I
> > switched.....apparently from showing the log from a few things, I pretty
> > much was switched over in 2007. I've enjoyed using it until the most
> > recent versions....both Subversion and Windows10. someplace along the line,
> > I quit getting icons with the green circle and white checkmark on them if
> > the "folder" was all up to date. So now, I have to select each and do a
> > commit to find out if it's actually up to date. This is time consuming as
> > I have around 35 different repositories. I don't recall reading about the
> > "feature" being removed as I was doing the updated to Subversion, then
> > again it certainly COULD be Windows10 <shrug>. It would be nice to have
> > the screen identifying the repositories that need to be committed.
> >
> >
Received on 2018-03-16 18:22:11 CET