[p4] P4V vs. P4WIN
Jason Williams
streak at narus.com
Sun Apr 15 19:52:14 PDT 2007
For me, a lot of it boils down to intuitiveness.
P4V seems to be designed by developers for developers.
P4Win takes into account all other classes of users that may need to use Perforce. And it plugs into the cool apps P4V comes with (Time-lapse view, etc.).
Because Perforce is useful outside of a pure development shop, it needs to be easy to use for people that aren't purely technical. P4EXP also makes Perforce easier to use for people that don't need a lot of what the GUIs offer.
--Jason
________________________________
From: perforce-user-bounces at perforce.com on behalf of David Weintraub
Sent: Sun 4/15/2007 4:28 PM
To: Sheizaf, Yariv
Cc: perforce-user at perforce.com
Subject: Re: [p4] P4V vs. P4WIN
But what you were saying was for Unix users to use P4win. Yes, if you
can find a shared workspace between a Windows and Unix/Linux machine,
you could use the "AltRoot" (and remove the Host field) in order to
share a workspace between a Windows box and a Unix box. I do that
right now with the Cygwin version of "p4" on my Windows machine.
However, what it sounds like you're saying is that if I have to do
something in Perforce and I am on my Linux box, I should leave my
Linux box, go back to my Windows box in order to use P4win and not
P4V, do whatever I needed to do, then go back to my Linux box to do
whatever I was doing in the first place.
I can understand a Window only environment and standardizing on P4win,
but if you have a mixed environment, P4V may be the better choice
since it works the same on all platforms.
Most of the problems P4win people are having with P4V has to do with a
different interface and the different way you would use that
interface. When P4V first came out, there was a lot of short comings
with it, but over time, it has become more stable. more powerful, and
more useful. In my situation, where I work on both Windows and
non-Windows system, I am better off using P4V which gives me a single
interface on all the various systems I may use.
On 4/15/07, Sheizaf, Yariv <yariv.sheizaf at sap.com> wrote:
> Hi David,
>
> Answer your technical question:
>
> Yariv:
> > Unix oriented users install P4win on their PCs, use the AltRoot option
> > and work from P4win because P4V UI is problematic.
>
> David:
> Explain how I install P4win on my Linux box again? The biggest
> advantage to P4V is that it works on *all* platforms while p4win only
> works on Windows. Using P4V means that I use Perforce the same way
> whether I am on my Linux box or on my Windows box.
>
> >> If your Perforce client work space is located on a filer (Network
> Appliance or alike), or using Samba, you can see your client files in
> both Linux and Windows, and use P4win (or P4v) from Windows using
> AltRoot field in your client spec setting.
>
> Regards,
>
> Yariv Sheizaf
>
>
--
--
David Weintraub
qazwart at gmail.com
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