Am Fri, 23 May 2025 14:02:46 +0200
schrieb Branko Čibej <br...@apache.org>:

> >> And of course, if we support "^.", we obviously have to support
> >> "^./any/relative/wc/path" in the same way.  
> > Not sure what you mean. ^/ is the repo root. ^./ is the repo path of
> > the current working directory. Naturally, ^./some/path would be
> > some/path below the repo location of the current working directory.  
> 
> Naturally? What if ^./foo/bar is the repos URL of the path foo/bar below 
> the current directory in the working copy? There are two, equally valid 
> interpretations, and I sure can't see offhand which one is better.

I don't follow. I guess I need an example. I read this paragraph and
think that you're repeating my interpretation again. Clearly I am
missing the meaning. Given a repository at

        svn://some.server/repo

and a working copy checkout of

        svn://some.server/repo/sub

in /work/sub, being inside that working copy, makes ^./foo/bar resolve
to

        svn://some.server/repo/sub/foo/bar

while ^/foo/bar would resolve to

        svn://some.server/repo/foo/bar

What does

        ^./foo/bar is the repos URL of the path foo/bar below the
        current directory in the working copy

mean otherwise?


Alrighty then,

Thomas

-- 
Dr. Thomas Orgis
HPC @ Universität Hamburg

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