[texworks] Document Version-ing and synctex Previewing

Paul A Norman paul.a.norman at gmail.com
Wed Jun 22 00:49:08 CEST 2011


Thanks,

I'm very interested in the one, Bazaa,  that Alain Delmotte has turned up
for no other reason than it apparently allows varying degrees of
 integration into the other version control  systems mentioned recently here
(which I have used in the past) as welll.

Looks like it is nicely .py and truly natively cross platform.

And it really is major with Canonical, yet is stand a lone personnel wise.
I mean really major with Canonical !

What do others think? ANy experience with Bazaar?

Paul


On 22 June 2011 10:16, Charlie Sharpsteen <chuck at sharpsteen.net> wrote:

> On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 2:58 PM, Reinhard Kotucha <reinhard.kotucha at web.de
> > wrote:
>
>>   > I've always felt that TeX is starting to lag behind other document
>>  > preparation systems in the collaborative editing/review
>>  > area. Microsoft Word has had "track changes" and other review
>>  > systems for years. Apple just announced an Auto Save feature as
>>  > part of OS X 10.7 that automatically tracks snapshots and allows
>>  > one to browse the entire timeline of a document and drag document
>>  > components back and forth between versions. We definitely have the
>>  > tools to do similar things in the TeX world, but it is difficult to
>>  > get an entire team of people to buy into them. Asking someone to
>>  > learn TeX plus a version control system all at once can be a tough
>>  > sell. If version control was built into the editor in a transparent
>>  > fashion, it would be a lot easier for newcomers to deal with.
>>
>> People are using TeX with version control systems for decades.
>> It's Microsoft which always lags behind.
>>
>> If you add libgit to TeXworks, will this help if people collaborate
>> with others who are using other VC systems already?  Wouldn't it be
>> better to add an interface to external VC systems?
>>
>> Regards,
>>  Reinhard
>
>
> The people that I am thinking about are those that have never used TeX or a
> version control system before---often it is just too overwhelming for them
> to learn both things at once. If we leveraged something like libgit2 to add
> basic version control that is largely transparent to end users, say just
> commit, revert and diff, that seems like it would serve the purpose of
> "lowering the entry barrier to the TeX world". It could also make life
> easier for the one person on the team who knows how to use a version control
> system as they would be able to import changelogs rather than manually
> checking in all of the changes generated by their teammates.
>
> -Charlie
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://tug.org/pipermail/texworks/attachments/20110622/dbf0d65f/attachment.html>


More information about the texworks mailing list