SVN Wines at Eclipse

Yesterday I discovered the Subversion (SVN) blame function, and I was wondering if this function is available from Eclipse?

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eclipse svn
Oct 21 '08 at 21:56
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As already stated, currently you need to install the plug-in first to enable Subversion support. I recommend Subversive , and a search here in Qaru for the "eclipse" and "subversion" tags together will display several previous threads regarding "gotchas" to monitor the installation of connectors (Subversive is divided into two parts - the main support and the "connectors" that provide SVN glue )

After installation, you can configure repositories, create new projects by simply entering a new repository address and checking it, or link an existing project that has already been attached to the SVN with the repository using Subversion.

After you have done , you will get access to the svn blame command, also known as annotation or praise:

For a resource, right-click the resource name in the File Explorer panel to open the context menu (you can also get this menu by right-clicking anywhere in the editor itself). In the Team heading section (which is also available for all SVN teams, since Eclipse generalizes the initial control under the Team Sharing heading), select Show Annotation . On my Mac PowerBook, the keyboard shortcut for this is Ctrl + Option + A , I'm not near my Linux or Windows XP Platforms to see what we need for quick access to any of them (Mac OS X-ports usually configure keyboard shortcuts to stick with a "better" view of what a Mac should do).

After a short conversation with the Subversion repository, the left trench of the editor window displays a series of color bars. If there are line numbers for your editor, they will overlap the numbers. Otherwise, they will be just bars. Each color rotation represents a gap in which responsibility changes from one user to another. If you hover over a panel, a tooltip will appear indicating the responsible user, revision / commit, with which the lines, dates and comments are associated. The color of the bars will range from committer to committer to review. They will differ from the shades of the same base color, but Eclipse will try to make them visually different (as much as possible). When you hang over a fragment, it stands out slightly, and all other bars tied to the same revision also stand out.

(Now don’t ask me how to disable it. So far, my only solution has been to close the buffer and open it again!)

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Oct 22 '08 at 2:03
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