Hey guys quick question, I created a brand new Visual Studio solution and then used Mercurial to commit that. I tinkered with the application a bit and nowI'd like to completely undo my changes, meaning revert to that initial commit,delting the changes from disc. What HG command doI need to run?
Now I found this: hg revert [-r Revision] so how can I find the revision variable? Do they mean Changeset? Because I can see the changeset value by using hg log.
use either the changeset hash or the changeset number
the hash is usually safer
changeset: 3223:7cdfff0902a7
tag: tip
user: balpha
date: Sun Oct 31 17:06:07 2010 +0100
summary: prevent a JS exception when clicking 'see full text' on multiline message
Viewing the folder in Windows Explorer I see that the added projects, etc. are still there. I imagine the hg commands only 'unlinked' them from the source control. How can I tell it to revert and delete anything that wasn't there at that specific commit?
@balpha That sounds kind of unproductive? :\ I imagine Mercurial had this process to the T; ESPECIALLY this process since that's the point of a source control system.
Basically here's the play by play: Created a new Windows Forms project; created a repo, commited; added some things to it just to test. Now I'd like Mercurial to wind back the clocks to what I had before adding the testing things.
After reading the things posted, I'm still lost. :P It seems that creating new classes/packages in Visual Studio doesn't alert Mercurial that they exist/track. So reverting won't delete them from disc, correct?
Here's a screenshot of the error:
The error itself is:
The specified named connection is either not found in the configuration, not intended to be used with the EntityClient provider, or not valid.
Going to the app.config file of that same project I can find:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding...
Does anyone know what this phenomenon is called: Why two blinkings lights blink at different intervals, they eventually sync up for a split second then diverge again.
In acoustics, a beat is an interference between two sounds of slightly different frequencies, perceived as periodic variations in volume whose rate is the difference between the two frequencies.
With tuning instruments that can produce sustained tones, beats can readily be recognized. Tuning two tones to a unison will present a peculiar effect: when the two tones are close in pitch but not yet identical, the difference in frequency generates the beating. The volume varies like in a tremolo as the sounds alternately interfere constructively and destructively. When the two tones gradually ...