1. When we start eclipse, we will have a hint:
If we enter the name of the folder directly, this file will automatically generate a folder named Njgzw at the same level as the Eclipse installation directory, and we will use this directory each time we start, so that the items imported in eclipse are recorded under that folder.
2. We check out the project directly from the SVN server, so we don't have to consider the SVN plugin in eclipse (Help-->about Eclipse-->installation in Eclipse) Details to see the SVN version is consistent with our native version of SVN. Detected in this way is definitely managed by SVN in our eclipse.
3. We are not in eclipse through the SVN detection project, we are directly from the SVN server check out to the computer of a disk, we started Eclipse, import-->maven-->existing in eclipse Maven projects can also detect projects in this way, which requires the svn plugin in Eclipse , with the version number of the local SVN installation , which is the same . This allows projects in eclipse to be managed by SVN.
4. It is necessary to understand that Eclipse's workspace is assumed to be njgzw, except that I am launching eclipse, and if the selected directory is NJGZW, when it starts, it will load which items in the directory will be displayed in eclipse. This NJGZW directory is not related to the exact location of the project that we are storing in eclipse, and I myself think thatnjgzw this directory is just a record of the location of the path to the project, This will enable you to find the items we need to load when we start eclipse.
Projects in Eclipse are managed by SVN