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- Mercurial SCM
You can follow our simple guide to learn how to revision your documents with Mercurial, or just use the quick start to get going instantly A short overview of Mercurial’s decentralized model is also available
- Tutorial - Mercurial
This tutorial is an introduction to using Mercurial We don't assume any particular background in using SCM software You might first want to read UnderstandingMercurial
- Installation - Mercurial
Mercurial is written in Python, C and Rust with platform independence in mind As a result, Mercurial is available on Microsoft Windows, GNU Linux, macOS, Solaris 11 Express and others
- QuickStart - Mercurial
Mercurial will look for a file named hgignore 2 in the root of your repository which contains a set of glob patterns and regular expressions to ignore in file paths
- Merging changes — Mercurial: the definitive guide 1. 90-ebb51bf94742 . . .
Mercurial can tell from the way merge exits that it wasn't able to merge successfully, so it tells us what commands we'll need to run if we want to redo the merge operation
- A tour of Mercurial: the basics — Mercurial: the definitive guide 1. 90 . . .
Prebuilt binary packages of Mercurial are available for every popular operating system from the Mercurial website at https: www mercurial-scm org These make it easy to start using Mercurial on your computer immediately
- Mercurial - Mercurial
Mercurial is a fast, easy to use, distributed revision control tool for software developers
- About - Mercurial
Mercurial source control management # Mercurial is a free, distributed source control management tool It offers you the power to efficiently handle projects of any size while using an intuitive interface It is easy to use and hard to break, making it ideal for anyone working with versioned files Distributed architecture #
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