26.04.2015 Views

Team Development with Visual Studio Team Foundation Server

Team Development with Visual Studio Team Foundation Server

Team Development with Visual Studio Team Foundation Server

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

How To: Create Your Source Tree in <strong>Visual</strong> <strong>Studio</strong> <strong>Team</strong><br />

<strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Server</strong><br />

Applies To<br />

• Microsoft® <strong>Visual</strong> <strong>Studio</strong>® 2005 <strong>Team</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Server</strong> (TFS)<br />

• Microsoft <strong>Visual</strong> <strong>Studio</strong> <strong>Team</strong> System<br />

Summary<br />

This How To article walks you through the process of creating a new source code tree<br />

structure in TFS. The purpose of this How To article is to familiarize you <strong>with</strong> the end-toend<br />

steps required to create your source tree.<br />

Contents<br />

• Objectives<br />

• Overview<br />

• Summary of Steps<br />

• Step 1 – Create a new team project.<br />

• Step 2 – Create a workspace mapping<br />

• Step 3 – Create your folder structure in Source Control<br />

• Step 4 – Add your source to your source tree<br />

• Additional Resources<br />

Objectives<br />

• Learn how to create a new team project<br />

• Learn how to create a workspace mapping<br />

• Learn how to create a source tree in <strong>Team</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>Server</strong> source control<br />

Overview<br />

Although you can quickly add a solution to source control by right-clicking your solution<br />

in Solution Explorer and then clicking Add Solution To Source Control, this option<br />

does not enable you to explicitly set up your source tree structure in source control. By<br />

explicitly defining your source tree structure in source control, you can arrange your<br />

source beneath top-level folders and use separate top-level folders to contain your main<br />

source base and your branched source base such as the branches you might use during<br />

development or to maintain production releases.<br />

In this how to you will see the steps required to explicitly create a source control tree<br />

structure.<br />

Summary of Steps<br />

• Step 1 – Create a new team project

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!