From the course: Visual Studio Tools for Azure DevOps
Unlock the full course today
Join today to access over 22,600 courses taught by industry experts or purchase this course individually.
Add a Visual Studio project to a new local repository
From the course: Visual Studio Tools for Azure DevOps
Add a Visual Studio project to a new local repository
- [Instructor] So far, in our look at Git tools, we've worked with this simple file and folder-based example, the one shown in Visual Studio on the right side of the screen. This doesn't look like the standard Visual Studio solution and project-based templates that are shown on the left side of the screen. The example on the right is using Git for version control, and it has a remote repo located on the Azure DevOps server. Let's add the solution on the left to Git. Now, this is a brand-new project I created by going to File, New, Project. Choosing Web, picking this top item, the ASP.NET Core Web Application. Giving it a name, and picking the razor page templates. So I've got this project, it's not under Git Source Control yet. But that's easy to fix by right-clicking and choose Add Solution to Source Control. Now you can see the symbols show up here that says I have got it under Git Source Control, and it's also been saved and committed to my local repository. Now, the reason it used…
Contents
-
-
-
-
What are Azure Repos?2m 38s
-
(Locked)
Connect to Azure Repos in the Team Explorer1m 16s
-
(Locked)
Add application code to an Azure Git repository3m 24s
-
(Locked)
Connect to Azure Repo as another team member1m
-
(Locked)
Commit changes as another team member2m 1s
-
(Locked)
Use Git commands from Solution Explorer1m 27s
-
(Locked)
Commit local before sync55s
-
(Locked)
Sync changes with a remote repository2m 33s
-
(Locked)
Create a branch1m 39s
-
(Locked)
Add a Visual Studio project to a new local repository2m 27s
-
(Locked)
Create an Azure DevOps project from existing Visual Studio project1m 39s
-
-
-
-