Mercurial > traipse_dev
view upmana/ReadMe.txt @ 68:3ea7a54284bb ornery-dev
Traipse Dev 'OpenRPG' {090818-02}
Traipse is a distribution of OpenRPG that is designed to be easy to setup and go. Traipse also makes it easy for developers to work on code without fear of sacrifice. 'Ornery-Orc' continues the trend of 'Grumpy' and adds fixes to the code. 'Ornery-Orc''s main goal is to offer more advanced features and enhance the productivity of the user.
Update Summary:
*Stable*
This is the first wave of Code Refinement updates. Includes new material from Core Beta; new debugger material (partially implemented), beginnings of switch to etree, TerminalWriter, and a little more. open_rpg has been renamed to component; functioning now as component.get(), component.add(), component.delete(). This version has known bugs, specifically with the gametree and nodes.
Fixes nodehandlers to bring the dev back to a stable push. Known issue with a nodehandler and it's sub dialogs.
Fixed a mis-spelled import. whoops.
author | sirebral |
---|---|
date | Tue, 18 Aug 2009 07:38:58 -0500 |
parents | 52f6a38f8885 |
children |
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Welcome to Update Manager 0.6.7!!! This is the first isntallment of Update Manager for the OpenRPG Virtual Game Table. The package includes several files that allow users to install Update Manager as a package into other softwares that use Mercurial. The package itself includes updatemana.py ## The Update Manager manfiest.py ## A clone of the Plugin Database file (plugindb.py) from the OpenRPG Project validate.py ## Currently unused but it is here for future packaging, from the OpenRPG Project xmltramp.py ## From the OpenRPG Project __init__.py ## So you can copy the upmana folder and import updatemana.py anywhere tmp folder ## Used to protect files during a repository update default_ignorelist.txt ## An empty txt, needed in case users cannot create their own ignorelist.txt default_manifest.xml ## A nearly empty XML file. Used to hold Update Manager information. The code is incomplete in this version, but the pieces that are missing have notes in remarks on how to complete them. So what can you do with Update Manager? If you have a project that you want to serve to users and user Mercurial as a way to deliver updates, Update Manager allows you to deliver those updates without the fear of creating a problem with user sentiment. Users will be able to (when completed) access their Control tab and update to any revision or any branch that has been served via a repoistory. Users also have the option to protect files from being overwritten during updates, or not update at all! If you have a development team you can use Update Manager as a speedy way to surf through your branches and revisions.