We are using SVN 1.10.0 (64 bit) .We would like to know if this version support two solution for Microsoft Visual Studio . Thanks in advance for your support

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Angel Roche

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Jan 19, 2019, 7:43:21 AM1/19/19
to TortoiseSVN
We are using SVN 1.10.0 (64 bit) .We would like to know if this version support two solution for Microsoft Visual Studio . Thanks in advance for your support 

Angel Roche

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Jan 21, 2019, 1:54:47 AM1/21/19
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Could you please update me on the below support request.

Oskar Berggren

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Jan 21, 2019, 4:20:25 AM1/21/19
to TortoiseSVN on behalf of Angel Roche
Hi,

I'm not sure what you are actually asking. Can you try to clarify the question please?

/Oskar


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Oskar Berggren

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Jan 21, 2019, 6:06:17 AM1/21/19
to Angel Roche, TortoiseSVN
Hi,

Please keep the conversation on the list, so that if someone else knows the solution they can jump in.

I have no idea what exactly is happening in your case. TortoiseSVN is a client for Subversion. If you use it to commit, from right clicking in Windows File explorer, it will commit selected changes to the Subversion server. Shouldn't matter if Visual Studio is there or if the files are instead used with some entirely different program.

Did you commit to a different branch?
Had you perhaps not selected the changes in the file list in the commit dialog? (If no, the changes should still be in your local folder unless you actively used the "revert" function in TortoiseSvn.)

You say "visual studio" and "solution integrated in SVN" - I'm not entirely sure what you mean, but Tortoise SVN is only available in the Windows File Explorer. If you mean that you are accessing Subversion commands from within the Visual Studio IDE, this means that you have installed some other Subversion client that does integrate with Visual Studio. On the other hand, if all you mean is that you have committed the Visual Studio project files and code to Subversion using TortoiseSvn then that's fine. Neither TortoiseSvn nor Subversion itself cares whether or not the files came from Visual Studio. It can handle just about any file.

/Oskar



Den mån 21 jan. 2019 kl 10:49 skrev Angel Roche <an...@hukamboss.com>:
Dear Oskar,

Thanks for your revert.

I have two solution which are integrated in SVN but when we try to commit and update then data is lost 
While taking a update ,then our changes are lost which are not there in SVN Server .

Regards
Angel 

Angel Roche

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Jan 23, 2019, 1:59:56 AM1/23/19
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Dear Oskar,,

Many thanks for your feedback .

We will get back to you if we have any further queries

Regards
Angel Roche

On Saturday, January 19, 2019 at 6:13:21 PM UTC+5:30, Angel Roche wrote:

Alexander Stohr

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Jan 23, 2019, 9:18:05 AM1/23/19
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Maybe he asked for something integrate-able to the MSVS IDE. Something like AnkhSVN. (i know that one, and i have it in use because it gives me nice "changed" bullets in the MSVC projects listing - for the rest of its features i dont care much as i dont use them at all.)

TortoiseSVN is a stand-alone tool that integrates to MS Windows File Explorer. Nothing more, nothing less. It just works.
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