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1 <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="help.css"/>
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2
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3
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4 <h2>I've added a new file: what do I do with it?</h2>
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5
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6 <p>When you add a new file in the working folder, you normally want to
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7 ensure that Mercurial keeps track of changes to that file – and that
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8 the file is included in all copies of the repository. To do this, you
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9 need to tell Mercurial to <i>track</i> the file by adding it to version
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10 control.</p>
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11
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12 <p>EasyMercurial shows files that have been created but not added in the
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13 <b>“Untracked”</b> file list under “My work”. (If your file is not listed
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14 there, try clicking the Refresh button.)</p>
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15
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16 <p><b>1. Find the file you want to add in the Untracked list and select it</b></p>
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17
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18 <p><b>2. Click Add in the toolbar on the left of the window</b></p>
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19
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20 <p>The file will be moved to the <b>“Added”</b> list. This tells Mercurial to
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21 track the file. The next time you commit, the contents of your new
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22 file will be recorded as part of that change set.
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23 <ul><li>Note: the equivalent Mercurial command for this is <b>hg add</b></li></ul></p>
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24
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25 <p>Of course, you don't always want to track every file in your working
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26 copy. Object files generated by a compiler, output files from tests,
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27 etc should often not be included in version control. You can ensure
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28 that such files don't show up in the Untracked list by right-clicking
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29 on them and choosing <b>“Ignore..."</b>.</p>
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