>>> I was inquiring the use of git with the use of one of our internal svn >>> repositories, just to have a feeling about it :( >> >> My opinion is that attempting to use git-svn to get a feeling of git is >> not a good idea. There's too much slowness of svn involved, too much >> pain of trying to learn git while also trying to learn git-svn (which >> itself has corner cases and such that pure git doesn't) and there's no >> bidirectional 1:1 mapping between branches (that I've found), >> eliminating a huge part of the joy of git -- cheap branches. >> >> Better to start developing on a pure git project to get a feel. You >> can't go wrong with sympy, for example. :) > > Oh, definitely. :) Here is a list of easy to fix issues: > > http://code.google.com/p/sympy/issues/list?q=label:EasyToFix > > if you want to learn it on some easy, but real world example. :)
Unfortunately, I'm investigating it for my professional use, and I don't have a decent Internet access (i.e. without proxies). Matthieu -- Information System Engineer, Ph.D. Website: http://matthieu-brucher.developpez.com/ Blogs: http://matt.eifelle.com and http://blog.developpez.com/?blog=92 LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/matthieubrucher _______________________________________________ Numpy-discussion mailing list Numpy-discussion@scipy.org http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion