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Cargando... Pragmatic Version Control Using CVSpor Dave Thomas, Andy Hunt
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I read this as soon as I started working at my new position at Red Hat. (I was hired to be a phone tech, but I prefer programming) After the positive experience with The Pragmatic Programmer (their first book), I kept an eye these guys. And when we started a new project at work that required us to move from a primitive source code control utility to a full-blown CVS installation, I decided to give their new book, Pragmatic Version Control with CVS, a try. This time, I bought the book direct from the publisher in the PDF+print form. That was really handy, like most geeks, I want to read about the new stuff NOW. I immediately printed out the PDF version and set about learning all I needed to know about CVS while waiting for the regular version to arrive. This book is at exactly the right level for the practitioner. It places the "gee I know nothing about source code control" in easy to skip sections and explains all the required setup and configuration stuff, not in exhaustive detail, but at a level that lets you get started and function without being overwhelmed with the minutia. If you use CVS but don't really understand it, or think you may need something like CVS, get this book. If you don't really "get" source code control and version management, this is still a great book, those first sections really explain the details and complexity that a tool like CVS manages for you. They also have released a version for Subversion, the open-source world's new darling source code management tool. Functionally, it's very similar but has a lot of new features. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
This book is a recipe-based approach to using the CVS Version Control system that will get you up and running quickly--and correctly. All projects need version control: it's a foundational piece of any project's infrastructure. Yet half of all project teams in the U.S. don't use any version control at all. Many others don't use it well, and end up experiencing time-consuming problems.Version Control, done well, is your "undo" button for the project: nothing is final, and mistakes are easily rolled back. With version control, you'll never again lose a good idea because someone overwrote your file edits. You can always find out easily who made what changes to the source code--and why. Version control is a project-wide time machine. Dial in a date and see exactly what the entire project looked like yesterday, last Tuesday, or even last year.This book describes a practical, easy-to-follow way of using CVS, the most commonly used version control system in the world (and it's available for free). Instead of presenting the grand Theory of Version Control and describing every possible option (whether you'd ever use it or not), this book focuses on the practical application of CVS. It builds a set of examples of use that parallel the life of typical projects, showing you how to adopt and then enhance your pragmatic use of CVS.With this book, you can: Keep project all assets (not just source code) safe, and never run the risk of losing a great idea Know how to undo bad decisions--no matter when they were made Learn how to share code safely, and work in parallel for maximum efficiency See how to avoid costly code freezes Manage 3rd party code Now there's no excuse not to use professional-grade version control. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)005.1Information Computing and Information Computer programming, programs, data, security ProgrammingClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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