Hmm,
I think, you could maybe save a lot of work,
if you do without cvs.
As you say, there are often releases, so I think too,
cvs isn't needed necessarily.
Maybe one option could be, update
1) the release and
2) only changed files.
Release. Drpython 3.3.3
Update from Drpython 3.3.2 to Drpython 3.3.3 (only changed files; if a file was removed, an annotation)
or at all (major release, next smaller release: only
update to last major release).
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3.3.3 is in cvs, with one bugfix.
Everything has been updated.
Just a question, do people find cvs usefull?
Should I continue to update cvs, (it is really only usefull when there is continued development and a delay between releases).
What thoughts?
Hmm,
I think, you could maybe save a lot of work,
if you do without cvs.
As you say, there are often releases, so I think too,
cvs isn't needed necessarily.
Maybe one option could be, update
1) the release and
2) only changed files.
Release. Drpython 3.3.3
Update from Drpython 3.3.2 to Drpython 3.3.3 (only changed files; if a file was removed, an annotation)
or at all (major release, next smaller release: only
update to last major release).