Using Subversion and SourceSafe at the same time?

I recently started a new job, and the company uses Visual SourceSafe for version control. In my previous work, we used Subversion. One of the “rules” in the new company is that you only pass on your code when you are happy that it works and that it does not break the assembly. Another rule: "No branching"

This makes my style a little difficult, as I like to create a branch by working on this branch, doing whatever I want (which gives me the opportunity to return if I do something stupid, which is quite common) and then merge my branch back into the trunk when I'm happy that everything works as it should.

So the question is ... Can I add files to my local subversion repository and not interfere with SourceSafe? Then can I do my local subversion reverse when I want, and when I'm happy with everything that SourceSafe does? It is safe? Will I tear SourceSafe?

thank

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2 answers

You will not break SourceSafe. This is a great way to work in your situation.

Update. Ignore any file that is not of direct interest to you, such as scc files. Your repository does not need to recreate the entire project, just keep track of the changes you are changing.

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Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/1776398/


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