In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Marcus wrote: > I'm new to developing large subversion-controlled projects. This one > will involve a few third-party libraries like wxWidgets, and perhaps > Twisted. Ordinarily you could just install these into your system and > they'll end up globally (in Python's Lib/site-packages directory). Is it > proper practice to instead install the libraries into a separate [vendor > branch] of the repository and reference that instead? > > I've read about vendor branches, and I'm under the impression that > you're supposed to do that /instead/ of installing the libraries > globally into Python's subdirectories... is that correct?
I think that's not the "normal" way. Vendor branches are useful if you want *exactly* one version if a third party product. That might be important if their API is a rapidly moving target or newer versions changed much, or have critical bugs. Another use case is modifying the external sources. Then it's of course a good idea to put the vanilla sources under version control to be able to merge updates from the vendor into the modified branch. Do you ship all that third party stuff with your project? Last but not least I'm using subversion nearly exclusively for source code IOW not for compiled code. Checking in an installed wxWidgets or wxPython alongside some source code "feels" a little strange to me. Pure Python code might be okay but if there are external dependencies one can't checkout on another computer and expect everything to work there. Ciao, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list