Git (capital "G"; git is the command-line tool) is in many ways designed to be better than Subversion. It is one of many distributed VCSs. My own first experience with these was with Arch/tla, as well as Mercurial, Bazaar, darcs, and a few others. For many reasons, which I'll discuss as far as they are relevant, Git has become popular and is often considered together with Subversion as the two leading choices for a personal or corporate VCS.
This tutorial is a cookbook of recipes getting up and running with Linus's source code management (SCM) software, "git." Its targetted mainly at Linux kernel hackers, though others may find it useful.
This tutorial offers both an in depth view of the Git distributed version control system while offering plenty of examples. The humorous style and real world solutions make this a must read for anyone learning or using Git.
Moving a subversion repository from one server to another, while still preserving all your version history may seam like a daunting task, but fortunately it's not too difficult.
css regex codeigniter javascript php mysql mootools framework ci mvc forms ajax blog regularexpressions world flash jquery dom svn dojo xml xhtml nav navigation menu effect plugins jqueryui twitter curl ui plugin wordpress event tinyurl photoshop apache google safari python mac search zend zendframework api json html sprites osx fade

For all the newest TUTs, follow @tutlist
JohnGalt (105 Tuts)
JDStraughan (96 Tuts)
linkbuild (48 Tuts)
TJHooker (47 Tuts)
girish (39 Tuts)
Drag TUTmark to your bookmarks
to begin using our bookmarklet.
Don't know how to use a bookmarklet?
Check out this tutorial.
Home Page (RSS and ATOM)
New TUTS (RSS and ATOM)
Subscribe by Email
To learn how to get your ad here.
CONTACT US TODAY!