Message
From
19/03/2010 15:22:20
Timothy Bryan
Sharpline Consultants
Conroe, Texas, United States
 
 
To
19/03/2010 14:18:10
General information
Forum:
ASP.NET
Category:
Visual Studio
Environment versions
Environment:
C# 2.0
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01455348
Message ID:
01455750
Views:
47
Hi Bonnie,

>>>AFAIK TFS is not going to slow VS down. It is a separate component.
>>
>>It does for me when I have connectivity issues or problem authenticating with the TFS server. If you have no connection when you first start VS, then you can elect to work offline. However if the connection goes down with the TFS Server after you have the solution open, it's a mess until you exit VS and come back in offline or with a good connection. It can seem to take forever to try the connection until it finally decides it cannot communicate with the TFS server. My TFS server is in another state and there seldom are issues, but when there are it's a major headache.

>
>Tracy, I don't find that a problem (losing connectivity with TFS once VS is open) ... as long as I don't need to check anything in/out. I just don't see it as "a mess" as you say. It may depend on your source control settings though I suppose. I have mine set up to only check-out something when I Save a file, not when I edit it ... that way, I have better control over when I need to actually access TFS and won't do it if I know I'm not connected to TFS.
>
>~~Bonnie

Doesn't this: I have mine set up to only check-out something when I Save a file, not when I edit it ... defeat the purpose? I am not using TFS but Vault and if I don't check stuff out *before* I edit I am sure to have surprises when I try to save. No Disrespect here, just asking. Maybe TFS works differently than I am used to.
Tim
Timothy Bryan
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