LizardTF: TortoiseSVN Equivalent For Team Foundation Server?

by Jon 4/20/2008 8:29:00 AM

I just restored my svn server at home this weekend--apparently after rebuilding my HTPC a couple months ago I forgot to restore my personal svn server--and after checking in my own bits, I also checked out some SourceForge code bits using TortoiseSVN. So then I was looking for TortoiseSVN-like Explorer integration of Team Foundation Server so I could do some source code check-outs from CodePlex.

I found an open souce upstart called "Turtle" whose name was apparently so controversial that it seemed to have been buried in its name's confusion. Then I found DubbleBock, and from there I found LizardTF. This is something to watch.

http://www.codeplex.com/lizardtf

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5/13/2008 6:10:53 AM

James Manning

You can actually use TortoiseSVN itself against CodePlex. That team gave us a demo a few weeks ago specifically with TortoiseSVN as the client and it looked and worked great (like it does against any "normal" svn server)

http://www.codeplex.com/SvnBridge

James Manning us

5/13/2008 6:19:45 AM

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Trackback from James Manning's blog

You can use your SVN clients (including TortoiseSVN) against TFS, including CodePlex

James Manning's blog

5/13/2008 6:24:38 AM

Jon Davis

Using SvnBridge, sure; I hate SvnBridge, though .. erm, I love SvnBridge for what it does, but setting it up per project inturrupts my workflow so I don't bother. Too busy ...

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About the author

Jon Davis Jon Davis (aka "stimpy77") is a software and web developer by day and a software and web enthusiast (geek) by night. He was recently a senior web engineer for the enthusiast division of a major magazine publishing company for nearly two years. He has been a programmer, developer, and consultant for web and Windows software solutions professionally since 1997, with experience ranging from OS and hardware support to DHTML programming to IIS/ASP web apps to Java network programming to Visual Basic applications to C# desktop apps. Lately, Jon's professional focus has been on C#, ASP.NET, Windows services, WCF, custom Javascript libraries, and implementations of Lucene.net and telligent's Community Server for multiple web sites.
 
Software in all forms is also his sole hobby, whether playing PC games or tinkering with programming them. "I was playing Defender on the Commodore 64," he reminisces, "when I decided at the age of 12 or so that I want to be a computer programmer when I grow up."

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