38 messages in com.perforce.perforce-user[p4] ClearCase vs. Perforce
FromSent OnAttachments
Matthew Rice08 Jun 2001 12:22 
Karr, David08 Jun 2001 13:11 
Chris Patti08 Jun 2001 14:09 
Kevin Bailey08 Jun 2001 15:24 
Vinny Murphy08 Jun 2001 15:29 
Stephen Vance08 Jun 2001 16:33 
Simon Morton08 Jun 2001 20:13 
mj...@panasas.com09 Jun 2001 06:34 
Stephen Vance09 Jun 2001 12:35 
Simon Morton10 Jun 2001 01:08 
Stephen Vance10 Jun 2001 09:31 
Arnt Gulbrandsen10 Jun 2001 13:37 
Todd Short11 Jun 2001 06:33 
Ines Heinz11 Jun 2001 09:59 
Arnt Gulbrandsen11 Jun 2001 10:14 
Simon Morton11 Jun 2001 10:47 
Chuck Karish11 Jun 2001 11:09 
Jonathan Biggar11 Jun 2001 11:27 
Christian Goetze11 Jun 2001 12:11 
Arnt Gulbrandsen11 Jun 2001 12:54 
Chuck Karish11 Jun 2001 13:14 
axel...@coremedia-ag.com11 Jun 2001 13:29 
George Van Treeck11 Jun 2001 13:50 
Chuck Karish11 Jun 2001 14:13 
George Van Treeck11 Jun 2001 15:09 
Christian Goetze11 Jun 2001 15:13 
Stephen Vance11 Jun 2001 17:48 
Stephen Vance11 Jun 2001 17:51 
Stephen Vance11 Jun 2001 17:55 
Christian Goetze11 Jun 2001 17:55 
Stephen Vance11 Jun 2001 18:02 
Arnt Gulbrandsen12 Jun 2001 00:57 
Christian Goetze12 Jun 2001 10:10 
Chuck Karish12 Jun 2001 10:10 
Stephen Vance12 Jun 2001 10:29 
Kevin Bailey12 Jun 2001 10:33 
Justus Pendleton12 Jun 2001 10:35 
Mike Castle12 Jun 2001 17:27 
Subject:[p4] ClearCase vs. Perforce
From:Kevin Bailey (k73@retriever.dyndns.org)
Date:06/12/2001 10:33:22 AM
List:com.perforce.perforce-user

On Tue, Jun 12, 2001 at 05:10:23PM +0000, Christian Goetze wrote:

Directories in ClearCase can be versioned, which is a feature missing in Perforce and CVS.

I for one haven't needed that feature yet.

And I bet you accept cyclic dependencies as a fact of life, because reorganizing the source tree would be too hard.

Wrong, I use the Official Perforce Method for Renaming Files (tech note 24). No problems yet.