In the source explorer, press CTRL + G. This will bring up the Find Changesets dialog. Unfortunately, this is one of the many different options in VS 2008: you have to work inside a large bulky search dialog, even if you already know the number (s). In your case, turn the radio button over to search the range, and then enter the desired change set number as the beginning and end of the range.
The version of this VS 2010 dialog box simplifies the use of the "one-time change set with #", FWIW.
My personal preferences: if you have a console window open, there is a faster route. Just enter tf changeset 12345 . If you use Power Tools, you can replace "Get-TfsChangeset" or "tfchangeset" for better performance and programmability.
Richard Berg Feb 23 '10 at 8:30 2010-02-23 08:30
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