Also, I use numbered markers to direct your attention to items within a figure. To preserve space, I’ve created figures that sometimes contain more than one screen image, and I make that clear in the text. I created the figures in this article from Visual Studio 2015 Update 2 Enterprise edition, but the items I discuss herein are available in all other Visual Studio 2015 versions, including the Community and Express editions. Then I’ll delve into how to configure Git how to create, connect to and work against a local repository (repo), including how to stage and commit changes how to manage branches, including merging and viewing history and how to connect to different types of remote repos, including how to sync changes. In this article, I’ll cover how Git differs from the source control technology that’s associated with Team Foundation Server (TFS), formally called Team Foundation Version Control (TFVC). But how do you access and leverage these tools? To complement this source control option, Microsoft has added feature-rich front-end tooling for Git to Visual Studio. Since their 2013releases, Visual Studio and Team Foundation Server have offered out-of-the-box support for Git, the enormously popular source code management system that has upended many traditional options. Volume 31 Number 8 Commit to Git: Source Control in Visual Studio 2015
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