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Hello, I'm a newcomer and I'm looking for a chance to see the source :)
#1
I posted a similar message in the deprecated forum before noticing IT IS DEPRECATED Smile

so thats what it was:
http://jpcsp.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2...731#p15731
Quote:hi, if I want to check out your java source code.

do I have to look for a dot class decompiler to be able to do that?

I've never used svn before or any other source control other then clear case
but from what I can see your provided links only shows dot jar related to java files
which contains dot class 'compiled' java code files.


is the only official open-sourced version of this project is 0.08? or am I missing something?

thanks a bunch for a useful reply Smile


I'd like for a chance to see the source code of something psp-related and see what I can make of it in the weekends.

hope to be helped out Smile
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#2
code.google.com/p/jpcsp
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#3
Also, if you want to directly experiment with the code, try checking out our latest rev from the link theball posted.
JPCSP is being written with both Eclipse and NetBeans, so any of these IDE's will help you with it.
If you have any questions or doubts just post here. Smile
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#4
(06-05-2010, 08:43 PM)Hykem Wrote: Also, if you want to directly experiment with the code, try checking out our latest rev from the link theball posted.
JPCSP is being written with both Eclipse and NetBeans, so any of these IDE's will help you with it.
If you have any questions or doubts just post here. Smile

thank you, I am familiar with these IDEs and used to love them both very much.

but for the last few years I've become quite the Emacs fan.

anyways what I'm missing is THAT link to that tarball which you are talking about.. where is it?

its not here:
http://code.google.com/p/jpcsp/

neither there:
http://buildbot.orphis.net/jpcsp/

so where can I find it please?


edit:
oh wait, I think I should be able to get it from here:

http://code.google.com/p/jpcsp/source/checkout

I guess its my chance to use svn for the first time Smile
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#5
If you only want to browse through the svn, before checking out the code, check this link: http://code.google.com/p/jpcsp/source/br.../src/jpcsp
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#6
I think the phrases in svn have different meaning then those of clear-case

in clear case I check out a file meaning I am allowed to edit it and I can later check it back in ('check-in') with my new edits back into the global stream

if I 'update' my 'view' of the global 'stream' I can get new edits done by other people

a 'view' is a local copy of the stream of the entire source code which I can edit on my own client side

if I preform a 'rebase' to my view of the stream it forces everyone else to later on preform an update for their view and I can later compare rebases with one-another

do all those things have the same meaning in both clear case and svn?

how can I do a non-reserved check out to your source code?
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#7
(06-06-2010, 05:47 PM)Miki800 Wrote: I think the phrases in svn have different meaning then those of clear-case

in clear case I check out a file meaning I am allowed to edit it and I can later check it back in ('check-in') with my new edits back into the global stream

if I 'update' my 'view' of the global 'stream' I can get new edits done by other people

a 'view' is a local copy of the stream of the entire source code which I can edit on my own client side

if I preform a 'rebase' to my view of the stream it forces everyone else to later on preform an update for their view and I can later compare rebases with one-another

do all those things have the same meaning in both clear case and svn?

how can I do a non-reserved check out to your source code?

Hmm...
SVN is a bit different. The SVN system itself is an unreserved checkout model.
It works like this:
Google Code hosts a global copy of the code, splitted in revisions.
Each revision contains the modifications applied to the main source code.
Since it's basically a server-client relationship, you need a SVN client application to be able to checkout the code.
IDE's like Eclipse or NetBeans have available built-in plugins for this. With NetBeans for instance, you need to go to Versioning > Subversion > Checkout and then input the link of the main repository (for JPCSP, you can checkout a read-only copy from the link in http://code.google.com/p/jpcsp/source/checkout ).
Then, a copy of the code will be sent to you, so you can compile it locally. Any changes you do on the client side have to be commited to the server, which only users with the right access can do.

Basically, imagine ClearCase's functioning applied to a website or ftp server. One source code in the server -> multiple source code copies for each user.
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#8
welcome miki800, thanks for your interest
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#9
How can I get access to committing my changes to server?
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#10
(10-31-2010, 08:57 AM)Aredo Wrote: How can I get access to committing my changes to server?
If you have some changes, PM a patch file to me. Any help in improving Jpcsp is appreciated Smile
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