Improve this answer. Noah Richards Noah Richards 6, 2 2 gold badges 29 29 silver badges 28 28 bronze badges. TFS is cool, but the tortoise team have got a lot right in the usability department - some stuff TFS can learn from.
This also works in the reverse for VS where compare seems to be the default double click option for git changes. Av Pinzur 2, 13 13 silver badges 13 13 bronze badges. FryGuy FryGuy 8, 2 2 gold badges 32 32 silver badges 47 47 bronze badges. Love it! Works in VS This works when using Team Foundation Server as the backend, but not for Git backends.
Shift-double click works though as suggested below stackoverflow. Works without restarting Visual Studio : — v. Have a look at andrerpena answer - useful to keep it forever in handy snippets folder. Anish Anish 4 4 silver badges 8 8 bronze badges. I had this set in the public registry in VS, and after upgrading to I went through the above steps to add it in the private registry for VS, but behavior hasn't changed. Did you actually see that this worked, or just that it had a private registry and this is how the key could be added there?
Yes, it did work for me and colleagues that tried it. Definitely not working for me. I just deleted, unloaded, re-loaded, and re-added the key. Then I have added and modified the files in the local path in file system. When I come back and do the "Checkin pending changes",in the list it only shows the modified files from local path, but not newly added ones.
Ensure that the items you want to add for example, the packages folder are in an appropriate location within a mapped folder on your local file system. On the Source Control Explorer tab, in the Folders pane, select the folder that contains the item or items you want to add. In the Add to Source Control dialog box, select the folder or items you want to add, and then click Next. On the Excluded items tab, select any required items that have been automatically excluded for example, assemblies , and then click Include item s.
On the Items to add tab, verify that all the files you want to include are listed, and then click Finish. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group.
Create a free Team What is Teams? Collectives on Stack Overflow. Learn more. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped.
Didn't match my screen. Incorrect instructions. Too technical. Not enough information. Not enough pictures. When you worked with TFS Source Control you must have came across on below situation Checked out by someone else or in another place ,. I found this very annoying as it doesn't say who checked out!!!
0コメント