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LinkBack | Outils de la discussion |
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#1 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
Hello!
I am a young developer finishing my apprenticeship(vocational education in Germany) next week on Friday. I am using mostly VB.Net at work, some Perl, PHP and C++. I "found" Ruby last summer and I fell in love with it(mostly because of _why's awesome online book). I had the chance to use Ruby for my final project. This paragraph is just to say thank you to the mailing list, Matz for creating this beautiful and fun language and the community for showing me many gems and Gems of Ruby. I am looking for a bug tracking, feature request and question tracking system. Question tracking can be seperated, but it would be great if there's an application which can do all of it. I'd like to introduce a bug and feature tracking system to keep everyone on the same status about a project. We don't use one yet, so I want to give it a try myself before I set up my own and work with it a bit before speak with the boss. ("It's easier to ask forgiveness than it is to get permission", Grace Hopper) I am learning at a small IT business selling software and hardware(mostly converters between TCP/IP, Bluetooth, RS232 and USB). Customers call many times daily to ask the same questions about the same products. It'd be great if we could collect the questions, answer them one time, write it down and then reuse and re-evaluate the answer, perhaps create a FAQ for certain products. Kind regards, Thomas |
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#2 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
On Jan 7, 2008 8:39 AM, Thomas Wieczorek wrote:
> Thanks! It is nearly what I am looking for. > I am looking for a solution that I can install on a local server and > make it available to my co-workers. We develop here mostly > closed-source programs. > I just found Trac(forgot how to spell it) again at > http://trac.edgewall.org/. It seems like a good system to me. Has > anyone any experience with it? > > Thomas > Trac is a very good choice if you want to run it on your own server and potentially customize it. One example of it in use, with customized styling is the Camping Web Microframework http://code.whytheluckystiff.net/camping/ Trac is quite mature and sounds like it will work well for your needs. Daniel Brumbaugh Keeney |
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