[DGD] Software Development Tools
Noah Gibbs
noah_gibbs at yahoo.com
Tue May 3 10:34:01 CEST 2005
SourceForge has a pretty generic task and tracking system. It does bugs,
features, tasks and whatnot, and has a section for plaintext documentation.
That's what I use. It's not incredible, but the price is right and it works
fine.
--- Neil McBride <sarak at castinian.org> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> It's been a while since I've poked my head up in here - hope you're all
> doing well ;) I've been thinking lately about software development tools,
> preferably linux but maybe the evil M$ side if there's something good
> enough there.
>
> I find that the way I tend to work on my own little mud project is about
> once every few months or more, and lately whenever I go to do some more
> work on it, I find myself working out where I was up to, what I was
> thinking, etc. In spite of somewhat excessive comments in code and the
> half-written design docs, I still find myself going back to the start for
> a refresher course on what I've done.
>
> So, I figured that there must be some useful (and hopefully freely
> available) tools out there that might come in handy. What do others use
> to manage the status, designs and generic ideas of these sorts of
> projects? Is there a special tool I've managed to miss due to my lack of
> professional software development exposure?
>
> I understand that different things have different success levels depending
> on the person using them, but since my success rate is a little low with
> what I'm doing (or not doing) at the moment I thought I'd see what works
> for others. Any ideas?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Neil.
>
> __________________________________________
> http://mail.dworkin.nl/mailman/listinfo/dgd
>
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