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C# Project what to put in Source control (Bitbucket)
Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Data science time! April 2019 and salary with experience
The Ask Question Wizard is Live!What is the difference between String and string in C#?What does the [Flags] Enum Attribute mean in C#?Should I add the Visual Studio .suo and .user files to source control?What are the correct version numbers for C#?Git for beginners: The definitive practical guideWhat do two question marks together mean in C#?Git workflow and rebase vs merge questionsManaging large binary files with GitHow do I remedy the “The breakpoint will not currently be hit. No symbols have been loaded for this document.” warning?Why not inherit from List<T>?
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I have created a C# project. I have created a Bitbucket account and want to put my project there.
What all should I put in the repository and what not to.
I am guess Debug and Release folders should not be uploaded. What about..
- Name/bin/Debug
- Name/obj/Debug
Thanks
c# version-control repository bitbucket
add a comment |
I have created a C# project. I have created a Bitbucket account and want to put my project there.
What all should I put in the repository and what not to.
I am guess Debug and Release folders should not be uploaded. What about..
- Name/bin/Debug
- Name/obj/Debug
Thanks
c# version-control repository bitbucket
add a comment |
I have created a C# project. I have created a Bitbucket account and want to put my project there.
What all should I put in the repository and what not to.
I am guess Debug and Release folders should not be uploaded. What about..
- Name/bin/Debug
- Name/obj/Debug
Thanks
c# version-control repository bitbucket
I have created a C# project. I have created a Bitbucket account and want to put my project there.
What all should I put in the repository and what not to.
I am guess Debug and Release folders should not be uploaded. What about..
- Name/bin/Debug
- Name/obj/Debug
Thanks
c# version-control repository bitbucket
c# version-control repository bitbucket
asked Mar 9 at 4:49
golugolu
9129
9129
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
It's a good idea to start with an established .gitignore
file. GitHub has a project that maintains .gitignore
files for various environments, including Visual Studio.
https://github.com/github/gitignore
Scroll down and grab VisualStudio.gitignore
. Or you can download the file with this PowerShell command (set the current directory to the root of the repo, first):
(Invoke-WebRequest 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/github/gitignore/master/VisualStudio.gitignore').Content > .gitignore
This should give you an idea of what the general consensus is on what belongs in source control and what doesn't in a Visual Studio solution. In particular, this will exclude the bin
and obj
folders so you don't commit outputs to the repository, as well as the .vs
folder and *.user
files, which are user-specific data. It also excludes files and folders used by popular third-party extensions that maintain their own user-specific data.
Once you have a good .gitignore
file, you can use git add --all
and it will add everything that's not ignored to the index.
add a comment |
Nothing in bin or obj should need to be committed. You'll also need csproj files and nuget package config files (be they xml or json). Things like appconfig files, and .vscode are up to you whether you want to have them in source control.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It's a good idea to start with an established .gitignore
file. GitHub has a project that maintains .gitignore
files for various environments, including Visual Studio.
https://github.com/github/gitignore
Scroll down and grab VisualStudio.gitignore
. Or you can download the file with this PowerShell command (set the current directory to the root of the repo, first):
(Invoke-WebRequest 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/github/gitignore/master/VisualStudio.gitignore').Content > .gitignore
This should give you an idea of what the general consensus is on what belongs in source control and what doesn't in a Visual Studio solution. In particular, this will exclude the bin
and obj
folders so you don't commit outputs to the repository, as well as the .vs
folder and *.user
files, which are user-specific data. It also excludes files and folders used by popular third-party extensions that maintain their own user-specific data.
Once you have a good .gitignore
file, you can use git add --all
and it will add everything that's not ignored to the index.
add a comment |
It's a good idea to start with an established .gitignore
file. GitHub has a project that maintains .gitignore
files for various environments, including Visual Studio.
https://github.com/github/gitignore
Scroll down and grab VisualStudio.gitignore
. Or you can download the file with this PowerShell command (set the current directory to the root of the repo, first):
(Invoke-WebRequest 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/github/gitignore/master/VisualStudio.gitignore').Content > .gitignore
This should give you an idea of what the general consensus is on what belongs in source control and what doesn't in a Visual Studio solution. In particular, this will exclude the bin
and obj
folders so you don't commit outputs to the repository, as well as the .vs
folder and *.user
files, which are user-specific data. It also excludes files and folders used by popular third-party extensions that maintain their own user-specific data.
Once you have a good .gitignore
file, you can use git add --all
and it will add everything that's not ignored to the index.
add a comment |
It's a good idea to start with an established .gitignore
file. GitHub has a project that maintains .gitignore
files for various environments, including Visual Studio.
https://github.com/github/gitignore
Scroll down and grab VisualStudio.gitignore
. Or you can download the file with this PowerShell command (set the current directory to the root of the repo, first):
(Invoke-WebRequest 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/github/gitignore/master/VisualStudio.gitignore').Content > .gitignore
This should give you an idea of what the general consensus is on what belongs in source control and what doesn't in a Visual Studio solution. In particular, this will exclude the bin
and obj
folders so you don't commit outputs to the repository, as well as the .vs
folder and *.user
files, which are user-specific data. It also excludes files and folders used by popular third-party extensions that maintain their own user-specific data.
Once you have a good .gitignore
file, you can use git add --all
and it will add everything that's not ignored to the index.
It's a good idea to start with an established .gitignore
file. GitHub has a project that maintains .gitignore
files for various environments, including Visual Studio.
https://github.com/github/gitignore
Scroll down and grab VisualStudio.gitignore
. Or you can download the file with this PowerShell command (set the current directory to the root of the repo, first):
(Invoke-WebRequest 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/github/gitignore/master/VisualStudio.gitignore').Content > .gitignore
This should give you an idea of what the general consensus is on what belongs in source control and what doesn't in a Visual Studio solution. In particular, this will exclude the bin
and obj
folders so you don't commit outputs to the repository, as well as the .vs
folder and *.user
files, which are user-specific data. It also excludes files and folders used by popular third-party extensions that maintain their own user-specific data.
Once you have a good .gitignore
file, you can use git add --all
and it will add everything that's not ignored to the index.
answered Mar 9 at 5:12
madreflectionmadreflection
1,7621715
1,7621715
add a comment |
add a comment |
Nothing in bin or obj should need to be committed. You'll also need csproj files and nuget package config files (be they xml or json). Things like appconfig files, and .vscode are up to you whether you want to have them in source control.
add a comment |
Nothing in bin or obj should need to be committed. You'll also need csproj files and nuget package config files (be they xml or json). Things like appconfig files, and .vscode are up to you whether you want to have them in source control.
add a comment |
Nothing in bin or obj should need to be committed. You'll also need csproj files and nuget package config files (be they xml or json). Things like appconfig files, and .vscode are up to you whether you want to have them in source control.
Nothing in bin or obj should need to be committed. You'll also need csproj files and nuget package config files (be they xml or json). Things like appconfig files, and .vscode are up to you whether you want to have them in source control.
answered Mar 9 at 5:06
JamesJames
1194
1194
add a comment |
add a comment |
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